Do novel mutualisms amplify the ecological impacts?
National Geographic Society 8237-07; co-PIs Amy Savage, Jennifer Rudgers; 5/2007-9/2009; $20,000 Invasive species pose one of the greatest threats to global biodiversity, and tropical oceanic islands are particularly vulnerable to their negative impacts. For these systems, invasion by the yellow crazy ant (Anoplolepis gracilipes) is a major threat. Identified by the International Conservation Union as one of the world’s 100 worst invaders, this species has already decimated some tropical island ecosystems. In Samoa, an island group integral to the Polynesia/Micronesia biodiversity hotspot, presence of the yellow crazy ant is of acute concern. Our data suggest that yellow crazy ants are at a critical stage in their invasion, possibly transitioning from low-level persistence into a phase of rapid population growth with potentially severe ecological consequences. We will investigate the ecological mechanisms that underlie yellow crazy ant success, examine early impacts of the invasion on