| Literature DB >> 25567967 |
Abstract
Biotic invaders and similar anthropogenic novelties such as domesticates, transgenics, and cancers can alter ecology and evolution in environmental, agricultural, natural resource, public health, and medical systems. The resulting biological changes may either hinder or serve management objectives. For example, biological control and eradication programs are often defeated by unanticipated resistance evolution and by irreversibility of invader impacts. Moreover, eradication may be ill-advised when nonnatives introduce beneficial functions. Thus, contexts that appear to call for eradication may instead demand managed coexistence of natives with nonnatives, and yet applied biologists have not generally considered the need to manage the eco-evolutionary dynamics that commonly result from interactions of natives with nonnatives. Here, I advocate a conciliatory approach to managing systems where novel organisms cannot or should not be eradicated. Conciliatory strategies incorporate benefits of nonnatives to address many practical needs including slowing rates of resistance evolution, promoting evolution of indigenous biological control, cultivating replacement services and novel functions, and managing native-nonnative coevolution. Evolutionary links across disciplines foster cohesion essential for managing the broad impacts of novel biotic systems. Rather than signaling defeat, conciliation biology thus utilizes the predictive power of evolutionary theory to offer diverse and flexible pathways to more sustainable outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Darwinian; agriculture; conservation; contemporary evolution; eradication; invasion; management; medicine
Year: 2011 PMID: 25567967 PMCID: PMC3352563 DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2010.00180.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Appl ISSN: 1752-4571 Impact factor: 5.183
Potential risks from management for eradication or nativism versus the conciliatory management of native–nonnative coexistence
| Risk | Examples |
|---|---|
| Failure to resolve problems associated with nonnatives | Soil salinization caused by nonnatives persists after eradication, hampers natives ( |
| Disruption of community/ecosystem function | Loss of native vegetation when removal of nonnative predator releases nonnative herbivores ( |
| Loss of ‘replacement’ functions on which natives depend | Habitat ( |
| Loss of novel functions | Nonnatives control nonnative pests ( |
| Evolution of resistance | Drug resistance in tumors (see |
| Loss of invasion-based diversification of natives | Ecological diversification and speciation in insects ( |
| Loss of augmentation of total local biodiversity | Local-scale and island plant diversity increases with invasion ( |
| High effort and financial costs of eradication |
| Three recent studies in different areas of applied evolutionary invasion biology indicate how conciliation concepts can be applied in strategic management. For each, I present the problem, current eco-evolutionary findings, conciliatory approaches, and similar findings. | |
| Problem | Among the rampant invasive plants in eastern Australia is a tree-smothering, Neotropical vine that is spreading rapidly, but few human resources are available to control it ( |
| Eco-evolutionary finding | Native Australian insects attacking the plant's seeds have evolved longer mouthparts that more than double the numbers of seeds killed ( |
| Conciliatory strategy | Introducing or hybridizing long-mouthpart populations with those on the destructive eastern invader may speed evolution to achieve better control. However, northern plants are prone to manual eradication, which threatens adapted insect populations. The conciliatory approach is to preserve populations of the earlier, more benign invasive plant while the biocontrol value of its adaptively hypertrophied native enemy populations is more thoroughly assessed. |
| Similar dynamics | |
| Problem | Transgenic Bt crops are partial alternatives to insecticide applications for controlling insect pests of major global crops. As a constitutive rather than facultative defense system, transgenic Bt is relatively likely to select for resistance, which has evolved in five lepidopteran crop pests in 15 years since its commercialization ( |
| Eco-evolutionary finding | Resistance evolution is influenced by the relative frequencies and performance of resistant versus sensitive genotypes in the crop environment. Strategies that maximize local productivity of Bt crops also favor resistance evolution. Accommodating the certainty of resistance evolution requires regional rather than local management ( |
| Conciliatory strategy | Sustaining the efficacy of Bt crops requires, first, conciliatory recognition that pests are unlikely to be eliminated and that resistance will evolve. Fitness advantages of resistance mutations can be reduced by agronomic practices including increasing plantings of non-Bt varieties (which are refuges for nonresistant pest genotypes), and managing refuges to increase fitness costs to resident resistant genotypes by manipulating additional factors such as host quality, natural enemies, sterile male release or pathogens ( |
| Similar dynamics | Chronic use of antimicrobials in uninfected livestock promotes the evolution of resistant pathogen populations ( |
| Problem | Promising systemic cytotoxic cancer therapies often fail in application. |
| Eco-evolutionary finding | By hastening the evolution of resistance, therapies to eliminate cancers potentially hasten tumor reoccurrence ( |
| Conciliatory strategy | Models predict that for micro-environmentally dynamic tumors, treatment for stability rather than for cure may improve host survival by managing for the controlled survival of chemosensitive tumor cell subpopulations that, in turn, suppress proliferation of otherwise less fit but chemoresistant subpopulations. Conciliatory therapies may further manage mutant chemoresistant subpopulations with manipulations that accentuate their pleiotropic metabolic shortcomings ( |
| Similar dynamics | In infectious disease, susceptible and vulnerable hosts may select for lower virulence. Interventions that reduce the contribution of these hosts to pathogen transmission favor increased virulence ( |