Biotic interchange is the process by which species from one biota invade another biota, usually due to the disappearance of a previously impassable barrier. [1] These dispersal barriers can be physical, climatic, or biological and can include bodies of water or ice, land features like mountains, climate zones, or competition between species. [2] [1] Biotic interchange has been documented to occur in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial environments. [3]
The general cause of a biotic interchange is the disappearance of a barrier that had been previously blocking the dispersal of species from two distinct biotas. The disappearance of a barrier could be from the closing of a sea, connecting two previously unconnected continents. [1] It could be from the melting of glaciers, allowing for migration across newly exposed areas that had been covered by the ice. [4] [5] It could be from sea level change, covering a land bridge would allow for marine interchange, while revealing a land bridge would allow for terrestrial interchange. It could also be from changing ocean currents, allowing for larval dispersal to new territories. [1]
Humans have also become a vector of biotic interchange. They have fragmented species habitat by blocking interchange in some regions. Yet, humans have also intentionally and unintentionally spread many non-native species around the globe. Climate change may also be impacting the effectiveness of natural dispersal barriers. [2]
One effect that is sometimes observed from interchange is the extinction of some species. These species may go extinct due to the introduction of a predator that they are not adapted to, or due to more successful competition by invading species. However, invading species can coexist with native species for millions of years after an invasion. Sometimes invading species can also improve upon biodiversity by increasing genetic diversity. [1] [6]
Another effect of biotic interchange is homogenization. This occurs when many invading species from both biotas become established, creating one similar biota. [3] [2]
Many of the biotic interchanges studied have shown an asymmetry in the sharing of species between two biotas. Typically there is a donator biota and a recipient biota, with the donator biota sharing more species than the recipient biota. [1] [3] [7] One example of biotic interchange asymmetry is that once the Suez canal was completed, most of the invading species have come from the Red sea and gone into the Mediterranean Sea(91 molluscs, 15 crabs, and 41 fish). There have been fewer species traveling from the Mediterranean into the Red Sea(3 molluscs, 0 crabs, and 6 fish). [1] [8]
Invading species from the donator biota are often only a small percent of the potential invaders available within that biota. That is to say, that not all species that could invade another biota do invade. For example, only about 4.3% of the total fish species available in the Red sea have actually invaded the Mediterranean. [1]
There are many hypothesis that attempt to explain the asymmetry and general processes involved in biotic interchange:
The Trans Arctic Interchange(3.5 Ma, Early Pliocene) - Sea levels rose, submerging the Bering Strait, and allowing marine organisms from the North Pacific Ocean and North Atlantic Ocean/ Arctic Ocean to come into contact with each other. [3]
The Great American Interchange(3 Ma, Pliocene) - Tectonic forces pushed North and South America together, allowing for the formation of the Panamanian land bridge linking the two continents together. This event has been extensively studied. [6]
Indian Subcontinent and Mainland Asia Interchange( Eocene) - The collision of the Indian plate with mainland Asia allowed for biotic interchange mainly from mainland Asia onto the Indian subcontinent. [9]
Bering Land Bridge Interchange(late Cenozoic) - Interchange between Asian and North American land species across the Bering land bridge. [3]
African and Eurasian Interchange(18 Ma, early Miocene) - Interchange that occurred between Africa and Eurasia through the Middle East after the Tethys sea closed. [10] [1]
The Trans Suez Interchange - Human induced biotic interchange between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea due to the construction of the Suez canal. [1]
Japan/North American Interchange - Human induced biotic interchange between marine species off the coast of Japan and North America. These species are transported as larvae in ships ballast. [1]
Panama Canal Interchange - Human induced biotic interchange between the eastern Pacific and western Atlantic oceans through the
Panama Canal. This interchange has been kept at a minimum due to the canal being freshwater.
[1]
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Biotic interchange is the process by which species from one biota invade another biota, usually due to the disappearance of a previously impassable barrier. [1] These dispersal barriers can be physical, climatic, or biological and can include bodies of water or ice, land features like mountains, climate zones, or competition between species. [2] [1] Biotic interchange has been documented to occur in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial environments. [3]
The general cause of a biotic interchange is the disappearance of a barrier that had been previously blocking the dispersal of species from two distinct biotas. The disappearance of a barrier could be from the closing of a sea, connecting two previously unconnected continents. [1] It could be from the melting of glaciers, allowing for migration across newly exposed areas that had been covered by the ice. [4] [5] It could be from sea level change, covering a land bridge would allow for marine interchange, while revealing a land bridge would allow for terrestrial interchange. It could also be from changing ocean currents, allowing for larval dispersal to new territories. [1]
Humans have also become a vector of biotic interchange. They have fragmented species habitat by blocking interchange in some regions. Yet, humans have also intentionally and unintentionally spread many non-native species around the globe. Climate change may also be impacting the effectiveness of natural dispersal barriers. [2]
One effect that is sometimes observed from interchange is the extinction of some species. These species may go extinct due to the introduction of a predator that they are not adapted to, or due to more successful competition by invading species. However, invading species can coexist with native species for millions of years after an invasion. Sometimes invading species can also improve upon biodiversity by increasing genetic diversity. [1] [6]
Another effect of biotic interchange is homogenization. This occurs when many invading species from both biotas become established, creating one similar biota. [3] [2]
Many of the biotic interchanges studied have shown an asymmetry in the sharing of species between two biotas. Typically there is a donator biota and a recipient biota, with the donator biota sharing more species than the recipient biota. [1] [3] [7] One example of biotic interchange asymmetry is that once the Suez canal was completed, most of the invading species have come from the Red sea and gone into the Mediterranean Sea(91 molluscs, 15 crabs, and 41 fish). There have been fewer species traveling from the Mediterranean into the Red Sea(3 molluscs, 0 crabs, and 6 fish). [1] [8]
Invading species from the donator biota are often only a small percent of the potential invaders available within that biota. That is to say, that not all species that could invade another biota do invade. For example, only about 4.3% of the total fish species available in the Red sea have actually invaded the Mediterranean. [1]
There are many hypothesis that attempt to explain the asymmetry and general processes involved in biotic interchange:
The Trans Arctic Interchange(3.5 Ma, Early Pliocene) - Sea levels rose, submerging the Bering Strait, and allowing marine organisms from the North Pacific Ocean and North Atlantic Ocean/ Arctic Ocean to come into contact with each other. [3]
The Great American Interchange(3 Ma, Pliocene) - Tectonic forces pushed North and South America together, allowing for the formation of the Panamanian land bridge linking the two continents together. This event has been extensively studied. [6]
Indian Subcontinent and Mainland Asia Interchange( Eocene) - The collision of the Indian plate with mainland Asia allowed for biotic interchange mainly from mainland Asia onto the Indian subcontinent. [9]
Bering Land Bridge Interchange(late Cenozoic) - Interchange between Asian and North American land species across the Bering land bridge. [3]
African and Eurasian Interchange(18 Ma, early Miocene) - Interchange that occurred between Africa and Eurasia through the Middle East after the Tethys sea closed. [10] [1]
The Trans Suez Interchange - Human induced biotic interchange between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea due to the construction of the Suez canal. [1]
Japan/North American Interchange - Human induced biotic interchange between marine species off the coast of Japan and North America. These species are transported as larvae in ships ballast. [1]
Panama Canal Interchange - Human induced biotic interchange between the eastern Pacific and western Atlantic oceans through the
Panama Canal. This interchange has been kept at a minimum due to the canal being freshwater.
[1]
This is a user sandbox of
17jacksone. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
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