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Biodiversity of Alabama: Invasive Species. Invasive Species. Definition: non-native species that are brought into an area and then displace native species Also called exotics, alien species or introduced species Do not have natural predators or competitors. 68. Privet.
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Invasive Species • Definition: non-native species that are brought into an area and then displace native species • Also called exotics, alien species or introduced species • Do not have natural predators or competitors
68. Privet • Introduced as a hedgerow • Spread by birds that eat the fruits • Outcompetes native shrubs and trees
69. Kudzu • Fast-growing climbing vine from Asia • Introduced to control erosion • Smothers native plants
70. Cogongrass • Introduced from Japan, accidentally and intentionally • Reasons it is a problem: • Fire hazard • Destroys native habitats • Livestock can’t eat it
71. Mosquito Fish • Small fish with bulbous body • An invasive species that was brought here to eat mosquito larvae that live in water
72. European Starling • Released into New York City in the late1800s by a man who wanted to introduce to the U.S. all of the birds mentioned in Shakespeare • Now widespread across North America • Outcompetes many native birds for nest holes
73. House Sparrow • European species, now found worldwide • Aggressively outcompetes native cavity-nesting birds • “French fry birds” – thrive near humans
74. Asiatic Clam • Introduced from Asia • Very common in Cahaba River where they take over native clam species Sandbar covered with clam shells
75. Japanese Honeysuckle • Grows as a vine and chokes out native plants • Can survive year-round giving it an advantage over some plants • Few natural enemies
76. Hydrilla Clogs waterways, restricting recreation kills other aquatic life by blocking sunlight and using oxygen promotes mosquito breeding
77. Chestnut Blight Chestnut once comprised one-fourth to one-half of eastern U.S. forests, and was prized for its durable wood, and as a food for humans, livestock and wildlife. Today, only stump sprouts from killed trees remain. Chestnut blight is a disease caused by a fungus that infects the tree
78. Wild Boar • Sus scrofa • Probably introduced by European settlers originally, although subsequent releases of European “feral swine" and illegal trap and transplant operations by hunting enthusiasts have encouraged their hybridization and spread. • Considered a direct and aggressive competitor with native wildlife and destroyer of natural plant communities of the state. • “Every opportunity for eradication should be undertaken.”
79. Fire Ants The RIFA was accidentally introduced into the United States aboard a South American cargo ship that docked at the port of Mobile, Alabama, in the 1930s, and came to infest the majority of the Southern and Southwestern United States.