Web of Science: 28 citas, Scopus: 30 citas, Google Scholar: citas,
The compensatory potential of increased immigration following intensive American mink population control is diluted by male-biased dispersal
Oliver, M. K. (University of Aberdeen. School of Biological Sciences)
Piertney, S. B. (University of Aberdeen. School of Biological Sciences)
Zalewski, Adam (Polish Academy of Science. Mammal Research Institute)
Melero, Yolanda (Centre de Recerca Ecològica i d'Aplicacions Forestals)
Lambin, X. (University of Aberdeen. School of Biological Sciences)

Fecha: 2016
Resumen: Attempts to mitigate the impact of invasive species on native ecosystems increasingly target large land masses where control, rather than eradication, is the management objective. Depressing numbers of invasive species to a level where their impact on native biodiversity is tolerable requires overcoming the impact of compensatory immigration from non-controlled portions of the landscape. Because of the expected scale-dependency of dispersal, the overall size of invasive species management areas relative to the dispersal ability of the controlled species will determine the size of any effectively conserved core area unaffected by immigration from surrounding areas. However, when dispersal is male-biased, as in many mammalian invasive carnivores, males may be overrepresented amongst immigrants, reducing the potential growth rate of invasive species populations in re-invaded areas. Using data collected from a project that gradually imposed spatially comprehensive control on invasive American mink (Neovison vison) over a 10,000 km 2 area of NE Scotland, we show that mink captures were reduced to almost zero in 3 years, whilst there was a threefold increase in the proportion of male immigrants. Dispersal was often long distance and linking adjacent river catchments, asymptoting at 38 and 31 km for males and females respectively. Breeding and dispersal were spatially heterogeneous, with 40 % of river sections accounting for most captures of juvenile (85 %), adult female (65 %) and immigrant (57 %) mink. Concentrating control effort on such areas, so as to turn them into "attractive dispersal sinks" could make a disproportionate contribution to the management of recurrent re-invasion of mainland invasive species management areas.
Ayudas: European Commission 300288
Derechos: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. Creative Commons
Lengua: Anglès
Documento: Article ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Materia: Mink ; Control ; Compensation ; Immigration ; Dispersal ; Hotspots
Publicado en: Biological invasions (Dordrecht), Vol. 18 (Oct. 2016) , p. 3047-3061, ISSN 1573-1464

DOI: 10.1007/s10530-016-1199-x
PMID: 32355453


15 p, 980.9 KB

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