首页> 美国政府科技报告 >Removal of Nonnative Slider Turtles (Trachemys scripta) and Effects on Native Sonora Mud Turtles (Kinosternon Sonoriense) at Montezuma Well, Yavapai County, Arizona
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Removal of Nonnative Slider Turtles (Trachemys scripta) and Effects on Native Sonora Mud Turtles (Kinosternon Sonoriense) at Montezuma Well, Yavapai County, Arizona

机译:在亚利桑那州亚瓦派县montezuma井去除非原生滑龟(Trachemys scripta)和对原生索诺尔泥龟(Kinosternon sonoriense)的影响

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The National Park Service (NPS) estimates that 234 national parks contain nonnative, invasive animal species that are of management concern (National Park Service, 2004). Understanding and controlling invasive species is thus an important priority within the NPS (National Park Service, 1996). The slider turtle (Trachemys scripta) is one such invasive species. Native to the Southeastern United States (Ernst and Lovich, 2009), as well as Mexico, Central America, and portions of South America (Ernst and Barbour, 1989), the slider turtle has become established throughout the continental United States and in other locations around the world (Burke and others, 2000). Slider turtle introductions have been suspected to be a threat to native turtles (Holland 1994; da Silva and Blasco, 1995), however, there has not been serious study of their effects until recently. Cadi and Joly (2003) found that slider turtles outcompeted European pond turtles (Emys orbicularis) for preferred basking sites under controlled experimental conditions, demonstrating for the first time direct competition for resources between a native and an exotic turtle species.

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