2009
DOI: 10.1071/wr08055
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Determinants of establishment success for introduced exotic mammals

Abstract: We conducted comparisons for exotic mammal species introduced to New Zealand (28 successful, 4 failed), Australia (24, 17) and Britain (15, 16). Modelling of variables associated with establishment success was constrained by small sample sizes and phylogenetic dependence, so our results should be interpreted with caution. Successful species were subject to more release events, had higher climate matches between their overseas geographic range and their country of introduction, had larger overseas geographic r… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Dogs are a classic, invasive mesopredator species (Williamson 1996;Boitani 2001) and, indeed, were successfully introduced into Australia despite a probable low propogule (Savolainen et al 2004; and see Bomford et al 2009 for characteristics of successful invasives). They are medium-sized, generalist and opportunistic foragers, and are highly adaptable to a wide range of habitats, which undoubtedly contributed to their ubiquitous distribution throughout continental Australia.…”
Section: Spatial Scale Predation Risk and Ecological Niches Are Impomentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Dogs are a classic, invasive mesopredator species (Williamson 1996;Boitani 2001) and, indeed, were successfully introduced into Australia despite a probable low propogule (Savolainen et al 2004; and see Bomford et al 2009 for characteristics of successful invasives). They are medium-sized, generalist and opportunistic foragers, and are highly adaptable to a wide range of habitats, which undoubtedly contributed to their ubiquitous distribution throughout continental Australia.…”
Section: Spatial Scale Predation Risk and Ecological Niches Are Impomentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Considerable advances in understanding the invasion process have accrued from comparative analyses of historical data, particularly on alien birds (reviewed by Duncan et al 2003;Sol et al 2005a;Blackburn et al 2009a) and alien mammals (Kraus 2003;Forsyth et al 2004;Jeschke andStrayer 2005, 2006;Jeschke 2008;Sol et al 2008;Bomford et al 2009). These studies identify factors that determine which native bird and mammal species get introduced to novel environments, and which of the introduced species subsequently establish self-sustaining alien populations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…pollination, carbon sequestration) and dynamics (e.g. fl ood and fi re frequency), hybridization and gene fl ow to native species, and the Yet although these factors may play a role in the likelihood of species ' establishment, the magnitude of the introduction effort (or propagule pressure) is increasingly believed to act in concert with climate suitability to determine establishment success of mammals (Bomford et al 2009a ), birds , herptiles (Bomford et al 2009b ) and insects ). The importance of propagule pressure underscores the perils faced by small founder populations early on in the establishment process.…”
Section: Quantifying Threats To Biosecurity: Estimating the Real Costmentioning
confidence: 99%