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From: vsram2003 <[email protected]>
Date: 9 June 2011 15:30
Subject: Ecology biased against non-native species?



Ecology biased against non-native species?
Nature authors: End bias, focus on impact, function rather than origin


The recent field of invasion biology faces a new challenge as 19 eminent
ecologists issue a call to "end the bias against non-native species" in the
journal Nature.

Often called aliens, hitchhikers or invasives, some scientists say that
non-native species could just as easily be coined "abductees" whose
transport links to activities by humans.

The authors of the Nature comments section note that assumptions that
"introduced species" offer only deleterious impacts are misguided and "that
human-induced impacts, such as climate change, nitrogen eutrophication,
urbanization and land use change are making the native-versus-alien species
dichotomy in conservation increasingly meaningless."

Mark Davis, lead author and professor with Macalester College in Saint Paul,
Minnesota, says that a nativism perspective – native species equals good,
non-native species equals bad – has dominated conservation efforts over the
past few decades. He points to a number of ecologists, "including those who
rightly could be called legendary for their contributions to the field over
the past decades, who believe there has been way too much ideology and not
enough good science associated with the anti-non-native species
perspective."

The authors believe that a shift in the field is needed to consider outcomes
and impacts of an organism on an environment rather than focus on native
origins.

"Scientists who malign introduced plants and animals for thriving under
favorable conditions seem to be disregarding basic ecological and
evolutionary principles," say Matthew Chew, an ecologist and historian of
invasion biology, and Julie Stromberg, a plant ecologist, with Arizona State
University. "Evaluating whether a species 'belongs' in a particular place is
more complicated than just finding out how and when it arrived."

Scientific studies show that while some introduced species have resulted in
extinctions, not all natives are beneficial, as in the example of the Pine
Bark beetle, which is decimating North American pine forests.

Chew and Stromberg have studied the impact of the non-native species in
riparian ecosystems, most particularly tamarisk trees in the Southwest
United States. Introduced to control erosion, Chew and Stromberg consider
its continued perception as a pest species, water consumer and invader
overplayed, while research shows its ecological role and ecosystem services
have been undervalued. They point to outmoded perspectives and continued
deference to outdated science as playing strong roles in negative
perceptions of the species and intensive investment in eradication efforts.
Recent discoveries have found that tamarisk in fact provides nesting habitat
for birds, including the endangered Southwestern willow flycatcher, and that
regional water management and climate change increasingly favor tamarisk
over once-common cottonwoods and willows.

While the introduction of non-native species was noted as early as the
1620s, by Sir Francis Bacon, the field of invasion biology arose as an
ecological approach as recently as the 1980s and 90s, inspired by Charles
Elton's 1958 The Ecology of Invasions by Animals and Plants. More recent
appraisals of Elton's research and publications by prominent ecologists now
prompt a call for a change, these authors believe: "Invasion implies so many
values. We need to consider the impact of these terms and approaches and how
they affect scientific perception, public perception, and in turn,
decision-making in conservation and restoration management."

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-06/asu-eba060811.php

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-- 
With regards,
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'Creating awareness of Indian Flora & Fauna'
The whole world uses my Image Resource of more than a *thousand species* &
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