I think the main reason that so many questions have come up and this =
discussion has flourished for so long is because most people no longer =
take biogeography in their graduate studies.  All of this was covered in =
my zoogeography course taught by Ed Moll.  Why have we chosen to not =
teach this at so many universities?????
=20
Malcolm L. McCallum
Assistant Professor
Department of Biological Sciences
Texas A&M University Texarkana
2600 Robison Rd.
Texarkana, TX 75501
O: 1-903-233-3134
H: 1-903-791-3843
Homepage: https://www.eagle.tamut.edu/faculty/mmccallum/index.html
=20

________________________________

From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news on behalf of =
Wayne Tyson
Sent: Sat 4/8/2006 1:17 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Biology of Invasion



Teresa, I remember hearing, many years ago, of a teacher who offered
to give any student a "A" in the course who could ask one intelligent
question.  She didn't say how she defined "intelligent question," and
I've always wondered if that wasn't the question.

I look forward to, not merely your compilation, but to your making
sense of all the responses.  I hope you will discuss the various
definitions, areas of broad agreement, and identify areas still in
dispute.  And, I hope you will reach a reasoned conclusion about the
degree of urgency and the nature of the problem.

I suppose I'd may as well throw in my sense of the matter, however
simple-minded.  I'm not sure I have any "answer."  But I plan to stay
on the quest as long as I can keep whole armies of organisms from
making a meal out of me.

1. "Colonizing" is what organisms do.  That is, they do what they can
to survive and reproduce.

2. Populations of organisms go up and down in response to changes,
genetic and environmental, according to their requirements for life
and reproduction.

3. Organisms that are broadly adapted, survive broadly.

4. The history of the earth as best we can understand it through the
paleontological record, consists of many species that evolved,
adapted, and survived to the present day--or could not or did not
adapt sufficiently to changes, some catastrophic, some gradual.

5. Interactions between and among species are part of a Great
Jiggling and Juggling, from microbes to, uh, humankind and
beyond.  Those interactions interact with other interactions, ad
infinitum (I hope).

6. When a more or less dynamically stable (nothing is static) habitat
is "disturbed" or "perturbed," the "system" reacts.  (Of course,
"perturbation" is change, eh?)  Adapted organisms rush in to the site
of perturbation--they are "opportunistic."

7. "Weeds" (colonizing species) that appear to rush in to the
perturbation site can be "native" or "alien" to the immediate region,
but they must be adapted to the conditions consequent to the
disturbance.  The scale can be small or large.  As conditions change
(as a result of the weeds' action or other changes), other
"colonists," native or alien, sooner or later (sometimes much, much
later, perhaps beyond the human time-scale--or certainly one summer)
also come to occupy the site, first with the weeds, then perhaps
effecting such change on the site that conditions are no longer
suited to the weeds and it comes to resemble, to US at least, the way
it was before the disturbance, and what we see as "dynamic
equilibrium" "returns."  If "we" help in this process, or accelerate
it, we call it "restoration."

8. Some organisms that are transported from "outside" the local
"system" don't require what we recognize as a disturbance to survive
and reproduce, apparently being adapted to the "undisturbed"
conditions of the dynamically stable, "local" ecosystem, and colonize
without significant change in the recognized habitat.  Such organisms
are clearly (or are they?) "invaders."  For our purposes, in our
opinion, for whatever reasons, they are.  Certainly when "we" are the
initial vectors.

9. Humans and elephants and mice and weeds can be notable change
agents, but it's an observation based on the human time-scale and
value system.  Does Nature "care?"

10. Never mind.  Just go out there and get those grants and have some =
fun!

WT

"It's turtles all the way down." --Anonymous

At 07:37 PM 4/6/2006, Teresa Woods wrote:
>Just wanted to touch in and express appreciation for a rewarding thread
>on a difficult and important -- urgent -- problem.  I've been reading
>with rapt attention and am waiting a few more days until contributions
>seem to have petered out, and I'll compile the citations and post them.
>  It will take some time to plow through and read all the articles, but
>I'm really looking forward to it.
>
>Thanks again!
>Teresa
>
>Teresa Woods
>Graduate Assistant
>Division of Biology
>232 Ackert Hall
>Kansas State University
>Manhattan, KS  66506
>785-532-9834
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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