Modeling disturbance-based native invasive species control and its implications for management
Authored by Nancy Shackelford, Michael Renton, Michael P Perring, Richard J Hobbs
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1890/12-1881.1
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Shifts in disturbance regime have often been linked to invasion in
systems by native and nonnative species. This process can have negative
effects on biodiversity and ecosystem function. Degradation may be
ameliorated by the reinstatement of the disturbance regimes, such as the
reintroduction of fire in pyrogenic systems. Modeling is one method
through which potential outcomes of different regimes can be
investigated. We created a population model to examine the control of a
native invasive that is expanding and increasing in abundance due to
suppressed fire. Our model, parameterized with field data from a case
study of the tree Allocasuarina huegeliana in Australian sandplain
heath, simulated different fire return intervals with and without the
additional management effort of mechanical removal of the native
invader. Population behavior under the different management options was
assessed, and general estimates of potential biodiversity impacts were
compared. We found that changes in fire return intervals made no
significant difference in the increase and spread of the population.
However, decreased fire return intervals did lower densities reached in
the simulated heath patch as well as the estimated maximum biodiversity
impacts. When simulating both mechanical removal and fire, we found that
the effects of removal depended on the return intervals and the strategy
used. Increase rates were not significantly affected by any removal
strategy. However, we found that removal, particularly over the whole
patch rather than focusing on satellite populations, could decrease
average and maximum densities reached and thus decrease the predicted
biodiversity impacts. Our simulation model shows that disturbance-based
management has the potential to control native invasion in cases where
shifted disturbance is the likely driver of the invasion. The increased
knowledge gained through the modeling methods outlined can inform
management decisions in fire regime planning that takes into
consideration control of an invasive species. Although particularly
applicable to native invasives, when properly informed by empirical
knowledge these techniques can be expanded to management of invasion by
nonnative species, either by restoring historic disturbance regimes or
by instating novel regimes in innovative ways.
Tags
Competition
Strategies
Impact
Regimes
Global
change
Biological invasions
Western-australia
Fire-prone vegetation
Encroachment
Juniper