Consequences of Multispecies Introductions on Island Ecosystems

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Abstract

The rate of non-native species introductions continues to increase, with directionality from continents to islands. It is no longer single species but entire networks of coevolved and newly interacting continental species that are establishing on islands. The consequences of multispecies introductions on the population dynamics and interactions of native and introduced species will depend on the form of trophic limitation on island ecosystems. Freed from biotic constraints in their native range, species introduced to islands no longer experience top-down limitation, instead becoming limited by and disrupting bottom-up processes that dominate on resource-limited islands. This framing of the ecological and evolutionary relationships among introduced species with one another and their ecosystem has important consequences for conservation. Whereas on continents the focus of conservation is on restoring native apex species and top-down limitation, on islands the focus must instead be on removing introduced animal and plant species to restore bottom-up limitation.

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Russell, J. C., & Kaiser-Bunbury, C. N. (2019). Consequences of Multispecies Introductions on Island Ecosystems. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110218-024942

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