Title of article
Rapid displacement of native species by invasive species: effects of hybridization Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Gary R. Huxel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
10
From page
143
To page
152
Abstract
The introduction of non-native populations can lead to the competitive exclusion (displacement) of native populations. This has been hypothesized to be further exacerbated by the potential of hybridization, which can dilute or genetically assimilate the native genotype leaving no “pure” natives. With relatively moderate to high rates of immigration, the loss of the native species can be rapid with or without hybridization. Using single-locus, two-allele models, I find that species replacement can occur very rapidly and the time to displacement decreases rapidly with increasing immigration and selection differential. Immigration and selection act in two different ways: increasing immigration results in displacement by overwhelming the native; whereas increasing the selection differential in favor of the invader leads to displacement via genetic assimilation. The implications of these results are the need for more empirical studies on the immigration patterns of invasive species and their potential for interbreeding with natives.
Keywords
introgression , Species displacement , genetic assimilation , Hybridization , invading species
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
835754
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