Native predators and exotic prey –an acquired taste?
- 18 February 2009
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
- Vol. 7 (10) , 525-532
- https://doi.org/10.1890/080093
Abstract
Only a small proportion of exotic species invasions give rise to hyper‐successful nuisance species, but those that do have dramatic negative impacts on ecosystems, such as the displacement of native species and disruption of native food webs. For a native predator, such changes may mean a major transformation in its resource base and a decline in its fitness. However, native predators may adapt to become more effective at feeding on exotic prey, either rapidly, via existing phenotypic plasticity, or more slowly, via natural selection. Despite a rapidly growing number of publications on the importance of species invasions as a driver of contemporary evolution in both invading and native species, we know little about how the arrival of exotic prey affects native predators. We propose that native predators could be important in regulating the long‐term dynamics of invading species and, consequently, that the overexploitation of predators could facilitate biological invasions.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in Consumption by Alewives and Lake Whitefish after Dreissenid Mussel Invasions in Lakes Michigan and HuronNorth American Journal of Fisheries Management, 2008
- Niche width collapse in a resilient top predator following ecosystem fragmentationEcology Letters, 2007
- Ecological consequences of phenotypic plasticityTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 2005
- And the beak shall inherit – evolution in response to invasionEcology Letters, 2005
- Biotic resistance to an invasive spider conferred by generalist insectivorous birds on Hawai’i IslandBiological Invasions, 2005
- Strong effects of predation by fishes on an invasive macroinvertebrate in a large floodplain riverJournal of the North American Benthological Society, 2005
- Changes in Diet and Body Condition of Lake Whitefish in Southern Lake Michigan Associated with Changes in BenthosNorth American Journal of Fisheries Management, 2001
- Phenotypic Plasticity in the Interactions and Evolution of SpeciesScience, 2001
- Rapid Increase and Subsequent Decline of Zebra and Quagga Mussels in Long Point Bay, Lake Erie: Possible Influence of Waterfowl PredationJournal of Great Lakes Research, 1999
- Density-dependent changes in individual foraging specialization of largemouth bassOecologia, 1997