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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/7107

Title: Biotic resistance to an invasive spider conferred by generalist insectivorous birds on the island of Hawai‘i
Authors: Gruner, Daniel
Type: Article
Keywords: biological invasion
Achaearanea
biotic resistance
Hawaiian Islands
insectivorous birds
Metrosideros polymorpha
spider
predator exclusion
Theridiidae
top-down processes
Zosterops japonica
Issue Date: 2005
Publisher: Biological Invasions
Citation: Gruner, D. S. 2005. Biotic resistance to an invasive spider conferred by generalist insectivorous birds on the island of Hawai‘i. Biological Invasions 7:541-546
Abstract: A central problem for ecology is to understand why some biological invasions succeed while others fail. Species interactions frequently are cited anecdotally for establishment failure, but biotic resistance is not well supported by quantitative experimental studies in animal communities. In a 33-month experiment on Hawaii Island, exclusion of native and alien forest birds resulted in a 25- to 80-fold increase in the density of a single non-indigenous spider species (Theridiidae: Achaearanea cf. riparia). Caged plots held large aggregations of juveniles and more large-bodied individuals, suggesting potential reproductive individuals are more susceptible to bird predation. Most examples of biotic resistance involve competition for limiting resources among sessile marine animals or terrestrial plants. The present results show that generalist predators can limit the success of introductions, even on oceanic islands, generally assumed less resistant to invasion.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1903/7107
Appears in Collections:Entomology Research Works

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