AI Article Synopsis

  • Ships are transporting species across oceans, altering marine ecosystems even in isolated locations like tropical Pacific islands.
  • Research using eDNA metabarcoding found 75 introduced species, making up around 28% of the local marine community, with primary producers like diatoms and red algae being the most common invaders.
  • The similar proportion of non-native species across ports of different sizes indicates a "drift" effect, where newly introduced species randomly persist in these communities.

Article Abstract

Ships moving species across the oceans mix marine communities throughout latitudes. The introduction of new species may be changing the ecosystems even in remote islands. In tropical Pacific islands where maritime traffic is principally local, eDNA metabarcoding and barcoding revealed 75 introduced species, accounting in average for 28% of the community with a minimum of 13% in the very remote Rangiroa atoll. The majority of non-native species were primary producers -from diatoms to red algae, thus the ecosystem is being transformed from the bottom. Primary producers were more shared among sites than other exotics, confirming ship-mediated dispersal in Pacific marine ecosystems. Limited alien share and an apparent saturation of aliens (similar proportion in ports of very different size) suggests the occurrence of "alien drift" in port communities, or random retention of newly introduced aliens that reminds genetic drift of new mutations in a population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112251DOI Listing

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