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      Threats posed to rare or endangered insects by invasions of nonnative species.

      1 ,
      Annual review of entomology
      Annual Reviews

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          Abstract

          Endangerment factors are reviewed for 57 U.S. federally listed insects and 116 rare eastern North American lepidopterans to determine the importance of invasive species relative to 15 other recognized endangerment factors. Invasive plants, social insects (especially ants), and vertebrate grazers and predators repeatedly were identified as groups directly or indirectly threatening native insect biodiversity. Among rare eastern North American lepidopterans, the (mostly indirect) consequences of the establishment of the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) surfaced as a general threat. Remote islands, especially those with high human visitation, stand out as being highly threatened by invasives. In the worst cases, impacts from invasive species cascade through a community and destabilize existing trophic interconnections and alter basic ecosystem properties, changing hydrology, nutrient cycles, soil chemistry, fire susceptibility, and light availability, and precipitate myriad other changes in biotic and abiotic parameters. Invasive ants and herbivorous insects provide some of the most dramatic examples of such insect-induced invasional cascades.

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          The Causes and Consequences of Ant Invasions

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            Characterizing ecosystem-level consequences of biological invasions: the role of ecosystem engineers

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              Comparative losses of British butterflies, birds, and plants and the global extinction crisis.

              There is growing concern about increased population, regional, and global extinctions of species. A key question is whether extinction rates for one group of organisms are representative of other taxa. We present a comparison at the national scale of population and regional extinctions of birds, butterflies, and vascular plants from Britain in recent decades. Butterflies experienced the greatest net losses, disappearing on average from 13% of their previously occupied 10-kilometer squares. If insects elsewhere in the world are similarly sensitive, the known global extinction rates of vertebrate and plant species have an unrecorded parallel among the invertebrates, strengthening the hypothesis that the natural world is experiencing the sixth major extinction event in its history.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annu. Rev. Entomol.
                Annual review of entomology
                Annual Reviews
                1545-4487
                0066-4170
                2010
                : 55
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269, USA. david.wagner@uconn.edu
                Article
                10.1146/annurev-ento-112408-085516
                19743915
                085f3b89-c996-4640-a437-b024efe7e5f5
                History

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