Abstract

Abstract Global homogenization of biota is underway through worldwide introduction and establishment of nonindigenous (exotic) species. Freshwater ecologists should devote more attention to exotic species for two reasons. First, exotics provide an opportunity to test hypotheses about what characteristics of species or habitats are related to successful establishment or invasibility, respectively. Second, predicting which species will cause large ecological change is an important challenge for natural resource managers. Rigorous statistical relationships linking species characteristics to probability of establishment or of causing ecological impacts are needed. In addition, it is important to know how reliable different sorts of experiments are in guiding predictions. We address this issue with different spatial scales of experiments testing the impact of two predators on native snail assemblages in northern Wisconsin USA lakes: an exotic crayfish, the rusty crayfish ( Orconectes rusticus ); and a native fish predator, the pumpkinseed sunfish ( Lepomis gibossus ). For the crayfish, laboratory experiments, a field cage experiment, and a snapshot survey of 21 lakes gave consistent results: the crayfish reduced abundance and species richness of native snails. Laboratory and field experiments suggested that pumpkinseed sunfish should have a similar impact, but the lake survey suggested little impact. Unfortunately, no algorithms exist to guide scaling up from small‐scale experiments to the whole‐lake, long‐term management scale. To protect native biodiversity, management of freshwater exotic species should be targeted on lakes or drainages that are both vulnerable to colonization by an exotic, and that harbour endemic species. Management should focus on preventing introduction because eradication after establishment is usually not possible.

Keywords

Introduced speciesEcologySpecies richnessBiodiversityCrayfishHabitatInvasive speciesBiologyLepomisPredationFisheryGeography

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION

1. Fishes have definite habitat preferences which cause them to be definitely arranged in streams which have a graded series of conditions from mouth to source. 2. Beginning at ...

1911 Biological Bulletin 137 citations

Publication Info

Year
1998
Type
article
Volume
23
Issue
1
Pages
53-67
Citations
298
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

298
OpenAlex

Cite This

David M. Lodge, Roy A. Stein, Kenneth M. Brown et al. (1998). Predicting impact of freshwater exotic species on native biodiversity: Challenges in spatial scaling. Australian Journal of Ecology , 23 (1) , 53-67. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1442-9993.1998.tb00705.x

Identifiers

DOI
10.1111/j.1442-9993.1998.tb00705.x