Ecology and
Evolution of Invading and Restored Species
Species impacts in native and introduced
habitats, character displacement, and life history change following invasion by
House Finches and other species. Ecological impacts of recovering species.
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Exotic species
introductions and endangered species recoveries are topics of great
conservation interest and also provide exceptional opportunities to understand
the ecological and evolutionary consequences of species interactions over large
spatial and temporal scales. I and
my students have studied several aspects of species invasions.
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An early and continuing
interest of mine is the ecological and evolutionary implications of the House
Finch (Carpodacus mexicanus)
introduction from western North America into eastern North America. This species exhibited explosive spread
throughout eastern North America following their release by cage bird dealers
from Long Island, New York, in the 1940's. Using data from both the Breeding Bird Survey and the
Christmas Bird Count, I documented the geographic spread, population growth and
associated population changes in several species of birds potentially competing
with House Finches (Wootton 1987a). These results showed that both the congeneric Purple Finch (Carpodacus
purpureus) and
previously-introduced House Sparrow (Passer domesticus) declined as the House Finch invasion front
reached different areas. One
intriguing pattern was the shape of the competitive relationship as the
invasion proceeded: rates of
per-capita competitive impact declined as House Finch populations
increased. Such a pattern is
consistent with possible ecological and evolutionary changes in the system that
may have increased niche partitioning. In the case of Purple Finches, this species specializes in
conifer-dominated habitats, whereas House Finches avoid these habitats. Prior to the House Finch invasion,
however, Purple Finches were also found in deciduous habitats in eastern North
America, and House Finches appear to be competitively excluding them from these
areas. The case of House Sparrows
may be related to differences in feeding performance on different types of
seeds: at feeding stations, House
Sparrows prefer smaller seeds such as millet whereas House Finches prefer
sunflower seeds. This combination
diet differences and declining competitive effect raises the possibility of an
interesting evolutionary response: character displacement. Prior studies of the evolution of morphological characteristics of the
House Sparrow following its introduction to North America demonstrate that it
can evolve rapidly. I have
collected beak and leg measurements from most major collections of North
American House Sparrows prior to the House Finch invasion, and plan to compare
them to measurements of populations exposed to House Finches for different
periods of time. There are
surprisingly few specimens of modern House Sparrows in museum collections, but
results from the few I have found are tantalizing: House Sparrow beak depths
are significantly smaller in recent individuals than in individuals collected
prior to House Finch invasion; a shift away from the mean beak depth of House
Finches. Further measurements and
studies of the relationship of morphology to feeding performance are needed to
nail down this effect. I have also
studied the House Finch introduction for changes in life history attributes
under different density conditions (high density ancestral populations vs. low
density introduced populations), and showed substantial increases in clutch
size in the low density population (Wootton 1986b). The House Finch system offers a wealth of other
opportunities to study ecological and evolutionary responses to species
invasion. For example, recent work
at Cornell University has shown a disease, avian conjunctivitis, is sweeping
through the eastern House Finch population, causing strong population
declines. The implications of this
new species interaction have yet to be fully fleshed out.
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Other aspects of my
research also relate in species invasions. I and my colleagues have documented changes in the seabird
community of Tatoosh Island, based on our long-term bird population records
there, that arise from both direct predation and through indirect effects as
Peregrine Falcons (Falco peregrinus)
have made a recovery from near extinction following protection under the
Endangered Species Act (Paine et al. 1996). This and other observations of changing ecology following
species recovery (sea otters, wolves, etc.) indicate that many endangered
species, rather than being insignificant minor players as is often assumed, had
historically substantial roles in many ecosystems.
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I am also studying
experimentally the role that the Signal Crayfish (Pacifastacus
leniusculus) plays in river food webs on the Olympic Peninsula of
Washington state, where it is a native. This species is now an invasive in other areas, and may be driving
native crayfish to extinction. Understanding its role in its native food web may help to anticipate and
counteract its effects in non-native areas.
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Several of my graduate
students have studied the ecology of invasive species in marine and terrestrial
habitats. Their research is
described in my Graduate Student lab page.
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