Abstract
Hawai‘ian ecosystems evolved in relative isolation and support an abundance of native and endemic species. As such, they are particularly vulnerable to introduced species that alter habitat and interfere with species interactions. Although mangroves are valued globally for shoreline protection and other services, their invasion of the Hawai‘ian islands may have negative effects on the abundance and functions of native species. On an island in Kāne‘ohe Bay, O‘ahu, we explored the relationship between invasion of the red mangrove, Rhizophora mangle, and abundance of the native burrowing shrimp Alpheus rapax, which shares its burrows with the endemic goby Psilogobius mainlandi in a mutualism that reduces predation on both. We hypothesized that the abundance of shrimp/goby burrows is reduced beneath mangroves due to increased cover associated with mangrove prop roots, which trap leaves and debris and may harbor the invasive red alga Gracilaria salicornia. At 3 mangrove-invaded sites, we conducted a survey of burrow density and benthic debris and found ~4–5× lower burrow density and 4× greater cover of debris under the mangrove edge compared to sandflats that were 1.5 and 5.0 m away. Burrow density was negatively correlated with total cover of benthic debris and with subgroups of that cover composed of G. salicornia or leaves. We tested the effect of debris removal over 2 weeks, which resulted in 3–8× more burrows. Thus, we provide evidence that invasive red mangroves, through trapping leaves and promoting presence of invasive G. salicornia among their prop roots, have strong negative effects on shrimp/goby burrow density. Although our study was limited in spatial scope, we propose that current efforts to remove mangroves in Hawai‘i, for both cultural and ecological reasons, will mitigate negative effects on endemic goby and native shrimp habitat.
Highlights
Human-mediated introduction of species to new geographic locations is an unprecedented and unique form of IntroducciónLa introducción de especies en nuevas zonas geográficas mediada por humanos es una forma de cambio globalScreened via Similarity Check powered by iThenticate Open AccessCiencias Marinas, Vol 46, No 4, 2020 global change (Ricciardi 2007)
These mangrove prop roots may provide a substratum on which the red alga Gracilaria salicornia can attach and grow or may trap drifting mats
We hypothesized that invasive red mangroves (R. mangle) in Hawai‘i create inhospitable conditions for sandflat-dwelling obligate pairs of an endemic goby (P. mainlandi) and native shrimp (A. rapax)
Summary
Human-mediated introduction of species to new geographic locations is an unprecedented and unique form of IntroducciónLa introducción de especies en nuevas zonas geográficas mediada por humanos es una forma de cambio globalScreened via Similarity Check powered by iThenticate Open AccessCiencias Marinas, Vol 46, No 4, 2020 global change (Ricciardi 2007). The Hawai‘ian islands are among the world’s marine invasion hotspots, with a high proportion of harmful invaders (Molnar et al 2008), including a sandflat “transformer”, the red mangrove, Rhizophora mangle This mangrove species was introduced from Florida to Hawai‘i in 1902 to help stabilize shorelines around the island of Moloka‘i. Hawai‘ian mangroves appear to be underutilized ecologically (Walsh 1967); for example, Hawai‘ian sediment invertebrates do not consume mangrove detritus as in the mangrove’s native range, likely because they have not evolved to consume the tannin-rich leaves, which are unpalatable and/or toxic to some species (Demopoulos et al 2007) These mangroves have created novel habitat through increased detritus deposition (exceptionally high in Hawai‘i) (Allen 1998, Cox and Allen 1999) and accumulation of finer sediments and organic matter, shifting the community to subsurface deposit feeders not found on nearby sandflats (Demopoulos and Smith 2010). Las plantas que colonizan el lodo intermareal o las planicies arenosas son una categoría de especies invasoras que se consideran “transformadoras”, i.e., el ~10% de los taxones de plantas invasoras que tienen impactos claros en el ecosistema a través de cambios drásticos en el carácter, la condición, la forma o la naturaleza de los ecosistemas en áreas sustanciales (Richardson et al 2000)
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