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The threat of invasive species - Jennifer Klos

  • 0:08 - 0:11
    Massive vines that blanket
    the southern United States,
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    climbing as high as 100 feet as they
    uproot trees and swallow buildings.
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    A ravenous snake that is capable of
    devouring an alligator.
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    Rabbit populations that eat
    themselves into starvation.
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    These aren't horror movie concepts.
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    They're real stories,
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    but how could such situations
    exist in nature?
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    All three are examples
    of invasive species,
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    organisms harmful not because
    of what they are,
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    but where they happen to be.
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    The kudzu vine, for example,
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    had grown quality in its native east Asia,
    eaten by various insects
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    and dying off during the cold winters.
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    But its fortunes changed
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    when it was imported
    into the southeastern United States
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    for porch decoration and cattle feed.
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    Its planting was even subsidized
    by the government to fight soil erosion.
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    With sunny fields, a mild climate,
    and no natural predators in its new home,
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    the vine grew uncontrollably
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    until it became known as the plant
    that ate the South.
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    Meanwhile in Florida's Everglades,
    Burmese pythons,
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    thought to have been released
    by pet owners,
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    are the cause of decreasing populations
    of organisms.
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    They're successfully outcompeting
    top predators,
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    such as the alligator and panther,
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    causing a significant reduction
    in their food sources.
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    They're not a problem
    in their native Asia
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    because diseases, parasites, and predators
    help to control their population size.
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    And in Australia, European rabbits
    eat so many plants
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    that they wipe out the food supply
    for themselves and other herbivores.
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    They're a pretty recent addition,
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    intentionally introduced to the continent
    because one man enjoyed hunting them.
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    Like the Burmese pythons,
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    various factors in their native habitat
    keep their numbers in control.
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    But in Australia, the lack of predators
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    and a climate perfect
    for year-long reproduction
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    allows their populations to skyrocket.
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    So why does this keep happening?
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    Most of the world's ecosystems
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    are the result of millennia
    of coevolution by organisms,
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    adapting to their environment
    and each other
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    until a stable balance is reached.
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    Healthy ecosystems maintain this balance
    via limiting factors,
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    environmental conditions that restrict
    the size or range of a species.
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    These include things
    like natural geography and climate,
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    food availability,
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    and the presence or absence of predators.
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    For example, plant growth depends
    on levels of sunlight and soil nutrients.
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    The amount of edible plants affects
    the population of herbivores,
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    which in turn impacts the carnivores
    that feed on them.
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    And a healthy predator population keeps
    the herbivores from becoming too numerous
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    and devouring all the plants.
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    But even minor changes in one factor
    can upset this balance,
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    and the sudden introduction
    of non-native organisms
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    can be a pretty major change.
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    A species that is evolved
    in a separate habitat
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    will be susceptible to different
    limiting factors,
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    different predators,
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    different energy sources,
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    and different climates.
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    If the new habitat's limiting factors
    fail to restrict the species growth,
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    it will continue to multiply,
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    out-competing native organisms
    for resources
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    and disrupting the entire ecosystem.
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    Species are sometimes introduced
    into new habitats through natural factors,
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    like storms,
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    ocean currents,
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    or climate shifts.
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    The majority of invasive species,
    though, are introduced by humans.
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    Often this happens unintentionally,
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    as when the zebra mussel was accidentally
    brought to Lake Erie by cargo ships.
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    But as people migrate around the world,
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    we have also deliberately brought
    our plants and animals along,
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    rarely considering the consequences.
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    But now that we're learning more
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    about the effects of invasive species
    on ecosystems,
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    many governments closely monitor
    the transport of plants and animals,
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    and ban the imports of certain organisms.
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    But could the species with
    the most drastic environmental impact
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    be a group of primates who emerged
    from Africa to cover most of the world?
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    Are we an invasive species?
Title:
The threat of invasive species - Jennifer Klos
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-threat-of-invasive-species-jennifer-klos

Massive vines that blanket the southern United States, climbing high as they uproot trees and swallow buildings. A ravenous snake that is capable of devouring an alligator. Rabbit populations that eat themselves into starvation. These aren’t horror movie concepts – they’re real stories. But how could such situations exist in nature? Jennifer Klos gives the facts on invasive species.

Lesson by Jennifer Klos, animation by Globizco.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:46
  • Hi,

    Please kindly note some changes are needed at 0:43: quality --->quietly

    Thanks

English subtitles

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