4.7 Article

Opening Pandora's bait box: a potent vector for biological invasions of live marine species

Journal

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 30-42

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12376

Keywords

biological invasions; bloodworm; introduced; marine; Mid-Atlantic (USA); packing algae; wormweed

Funding

  1. Darling Marine Center
  2. Maryland Sea Grant [NA10OAR4170072, SA7528120]

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AimFor over 80years, the Maine baitworm trade has shipped live polychaete worms and packing algae wormweed' to distributors world-wide, while also consistently transferring a wide diversity and abundance of hitchhiking organisms of all life stages to numerous recipient communities. Here, we investigate this potent, yet underestimated, invasion vector using an important recipient region (the Mid-Atlantic) to examine the stepwise species transfer and survival along four stages of the vector. LocationMaine and Mid-Atlantic region (New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina), USA. MethodsWe quantified taxonomic identities and abundances of organisms associated with packing algae at four stages along the vector pathway during summer 2011: (1) Maine source habitats; (2) bait boxes from Maine distributors; (3) bait boxes from distributors in five Mid-Atlantic States; and (4) bait bags from retailers in five Mid-Atlantic States. We also examined functional diversity based on significant physical and life history characteristics and assessed genetic diversity for two common hitchhiking snail species. ResultsWe identified 17,798 live macro-organisms across 58 taxa, including marine macro-invertebrates, macroalgae, vascular plants and semi-terrestrial or aquatic invertebrates, present in bait boxes and bags. In all measures of diversity and abundance, we observed decreases of live marine macro-invertebrates across sequential stages of the vector from source to recipient regions. Significant differences in community composition were also observed between stages and were driven by isopods (taxonomic diversity) and isopods, amphipods and some gastropods (functional diversity). Main conclusionsThe lack of management in the face of the sheer magnitude and diversity of organisms that are transported via the live marine bait trade underscores how this is an underappreciated vector that could be a considerable source of successful invasions globally.

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