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首页> 外文期刊>New Zealand Journal of Ecology >Life histories, dispersal, invasions, and global change: progress and prospects in New Zealand ecology, 1989-2029
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Life histories, dispersal, invasions, and global change: progress and prospects in New Zealand ecology, 1989-2029

机译:生命历史,传播,入侵和全球变化:1989年至2029年新西兰生态学的进展和前景

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摘要

We highlight three areas of significant progress in ecology since 1989 which are particularly relevant to New Zealand, and three major challenges for the next two decades. Progress: (1) The unusual life histories of New Zealand organisms, including extreme longevity and low reproductive rates, are now seen as efficient responses to the low-disturbance environment present before the arrival of large mammals, including humans. (2) Recent data show that long distance dispersal has been far more common than previously supposed, changing our image of New Zealand from a Gondwanan ark to the "flypaper of the Pacific". (3) Greatly improved techniques for pest control, and innovative species management, have stabilised numbers of many of the most charismatic of New Zealand's threatened species. Problems: (1) Native species continue to decline, including many previously thought to be stable, and improved phylogenetics and new discoveries have added threatened species. (2) Despite increased emphasis on biosecurity, biological invasions are continuing, driven by increased trade and lags in naturalisation. (3) Conservation efforts risk being overwhelmed by the direct effects of increasing human population, resource use, invasions, and global climate change at a time when human food supplies and economies are coming under increasing pressure from environmental constraints. Conclusions: (1) We need improved ecological understanding and more management tools for invasive and threatened species, especially for species other than birds. (2) In these decades of rapid climate change and habitat conversion, there is an urgent need for more widespread and sustainable integration of native species into New Zealand's rural and urban lowland landscapes.
机译:我们着重介绍了自1989年以来在生态方面取得重大进展的三个领域,这些领域与新西兰特别相关,以及今后二十年的三个主要挑战。进展:(1)新西兰生物体异常的生命史,包括极长的寿命和较低的繁殖率,现已被视为对包括人类在内的大型哺乳动物到来之前低干扰环境的有效反应。 (2)最近的数据显示,远距离扩散比以前想象的要普遍得多,这使我们对新西兰的形象从冈瓦纳方舟变成了“太平洋飞蝇”。 (3)极大地改进了害虫控制技术和创新的物种管理,已使许多新西兰最具威胁力的物种的数量稳定下来。问题:(1)本地物种继续减少,包括许多以前被认为是稳定的物种,并且改良的系统发育和新发现增加了受威胁物种。 (2)尽管越来越重视生物安全,但由于贸易增加和归化滞后,生物入侵仍在继续。 (3)在人类粮食供应和经济正受到来自环境限制的越来越大的压力之时,人口增长,资源使用,入侵和全球气候变化的直接影响使保护工作面临不堪重负的风险。结论:(1)我们需要对入侵和受威胁物种,特别是鸟类以外物种的生态学认识和更多管理工具。 (2)在这几十年的快速气候变化和栖息地转换中,迫切需要将本地物种更广泛和可持续地整合到新西兰的农村和城市低地景观中。

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