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Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species

The dominant criterion to determine when an introduced species is established relies on the maintenance of a self-sustaining population in the area of introduction, i.e. on the viability of the population from a demographic perspective. There is however a paucity of demographic studies on introduced...

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Autores principales: Sanz-Aguilar, Ana, Anadón, José D., Edelaar, Pim, Carrete, Martina, Tella, José Luis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4198196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25333743
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110019
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author Sanz-Aguilar, Ana
Anadón, José D.
Edelaar, Pim
Carrete, Martina
Tella, José Luis
author_facet Sanz-Aguilar, Ana
Anadón, José D.
Edelaar, Pim
Carrete, Martina
Tella, José Luis
author_sort Sanz-Aguilar, Ana
collection PubMed
description The dominant criterion to determine when an introduced species is established relies on the maintenance of a self-sustaining population in the area of introduction, i.e. on the viability of the population from a demographic perspective. There is however a paucity of demographic studies on introduced species, and establishment success is thus generally determined by expert opinion without undertaking population viability analyses (PVAs). By means of an intensive five year capture-recapture monitoring program (involving >12,000 marked individuals) we studied the demography of five introduced passerine bird species in southern Spain which are established and have undergone a fast expansion over the last decades. We obtained useful estimates of demographic parameters (survival and reproduction) for one colonial species (Ploceus melanocephalus), confirming the long-term viability of its local population through PVAs. However, extremely low recapture rates prevented the estimation of survival parameters and population growth rates for widely distributed species with low local densities (Estrilda troglodytes and Amandava amandava) but also for highly abundant yet non-colonial species (Estrilda astrild and Euplectes afer). Therefore, determining the establishment success of introduced passerine species by demographic criteria alone may often be troublesome even when devoting much effort to field-work. Alternative quantitative methodologies such as the analysis of spatio-temporal species distributions complemented with expert opinion deserve thus their role in the assessment of establishment success of introduced species when estimates of demographic parameters are difficult to obtain, as is generally the case for non-colonial, highly mobile passerines.
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spelling pubmed-41981962014-10-21 Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species Sanz-Aguilar, Ana Anadón, José D. Edelaar, Pim Carrete, Martina Tella, José Luis PLoS One Research Article The dominant criterion to determine when an introduced species is established relies on the maintenance of a self-sustaining population in the area of introduction, i.e. on the viability of the population from a demographic perspective. There is however a paucity of demographic studies on introduced species, and establishment success is thus generally determined by expert opinion without undertaking population viability analyses (PVAs). By means of an intensive five year capture-recapture monitoring program (involving >12,000 marked individuals) we studied the demography of five introduced passerine bird species in southern Spain which are established and have undergone a fast expansion over the last decades. We obtained useful estimates of demographic parameters (survival and reproduction) for one colonial species (Ploceus melanocephalus), confirming the long-term viability of its local population through PVAs. However, extremely low recapture rates prevented the estimation of survival parameters and population growth rates for widely distributed species with low local densities (Estrilda troglodytes and Amandava amandava) but also for highly abundant yet non-colonial species (Estrilda astrild and Euplectes afer). Therefore, determining the establishment success of introduced passerine species by demographic criteria alone may often be troublesome even when devoting much effort to field-work. Alternative quantitative methodologies such as the analysis of spatio-temporal species distributions complemented with expert opinion deserve thus their role in the assessment of establishment success of introduced species when estimates of demographic parameters are difficult to obtain, as is generally the case for non-colonial, highly mobile passerines. Public Library of Science 2014-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4198196/ /pubmed/25333743 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110019 Text en © 2014 Sanz-Aguilar et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sanz-Aguilar, Ana
Anadón, José D.
Edelaar, Pim
Carrete, Martina
Tella, José Luis
Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species
title Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species
title_full Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species
title_fullStr Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species
title_full_unstemmed Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species
title_short Can Establishment Success Be Determined through Demographic Parameters? A Case Study on Five Introduced Bird Species
title_sort can establishment success be determined through demographic parameters? a case study on five introduced bird species
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4198196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25333743
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110019
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