Published November 1, 1998 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Fritts, T. H., and G. H. Rodda. The role of introduced species in the degradation of island ecosystems: a case history of Guam. Annual Reviews in Ecology and Systematics

Description

The accidental introduction of the brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) on Guam around 1950 induced a cascade of extirpations that may be unprecedented among historical extinction events in taxonomic scope and severity. Birds, bats, and reptiles were affected, and by 1990 most forested areas on Guam retained only three native vertebrates, all of which were small lizards. Of the hypotheses to account for the severity of this extinction event, we find some support for the importance of lack of coevolution between introduced predator and prey, avail-ability of alternate prey, extraordinary predatory capabilities of the snake, and vulnerabilities of the Guam ecosystem. In addition, there were important interac-tions among these factors, especially the presence of introduced prey (possessing coevolutionary experience) that were thus able to maintain their populations and provide alternate prey to the introduced predator while it was driving the native prey species to extinction. This complex of vulnerabilities is common on oceanic islands. 1 The US government has the right to retain a nonexclusive, royalty-free license in and to any copyright covering this paper.

Files

article.pdf

Files (267.5 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:15c7d73d250c5eb9274bc8c90b90c16c
267.5 kB Preview Download