4.5 Article

A tough egg to crack: recreational boats as vectors for invasive goby eggs and transdisciplinary management approaches

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 6, 期 3, 页码 707-715

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1892

关键词

Attachment strength; biological invasions; conservation management; desiccation tolerance; Neogobius melanostomus; Ponticola kessleri; saltatorial dispersal

资金

  1. Research Centre for Sustainable Energy and Water Supply (FoNEW)
  2. Federal Office for the Environment, Switzerland
  3. Canton of Basel Stadt
  4. Lottery fund of the canton Aargau
  5. Lottery fund of the canton Basel-Land
  6. Lottery fund of the canton Solothurn

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Non-native invasive species are a major threat to biodiversity, especially in freshwater ecosystems. Freshwater ecosystems are naturally rather isolated from one another. Nonetheless, invasive species often spread rapidly across water sheds. This spread is to a large extent realized by human activities that provide vectors. For example, recreational boats can carry invasive species propagules as aquatic hitch- hikers within and across water sheds. We used invasive gobies in Switzerland as a case study to test the plausibility that recreational boats can serve as vectors for invasive fish and that fish eggs can serve as propagules. We found that the peak season of boat movements across Switzerland and the goby spawning season overlap temporally. It is thus plausible that goby eggs attached to boats, anchors, or gear may be transported across watersheds. In experimental trials, we found that goby eggs show resistance to physical removal ( 90 mN attachment strength of individual eggs) and stay attached if exposed to rapid water flow ( 2.8 m center dot s - 1 for 1 h). When exposing the eggs to air, we found that hatching success remained high (> 95%) even after eggs had been out of water for up to 24 h. It is thus plausible that eggs survive pick up, within-water and overland transport by boats. We complemented the experimental plausibility tests with a survey on how decision makers from inside and outside academia rate the feasibility of managing recreational boats as vectors. We found consensus that an installation of a preventive boat vector management is considered an effective and urgent measure. This study advances our understanding of the potential of recreational boats to serve as vectors for invasive vertebrate species and demonstrates that preventive management of recreational boats is considered feasible by relevant decision makers inside and outside academia.

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