Affiliation:
1. Department of Antarctic Biology, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
2. Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków, Poland
Abstract
Antarctica, with its severe conditions, is poor in terrestrial fauna species. However, an increase in human presence together with climate change may cause an influx of non-native species. Here we report a significant increase in colonized area of one of the few known invasive species to date in Antarctica. Non-native flies of Trichocera maculipennis have been recently observed in the Admiralty Bay area on King George Island, South Shetlands Islands, West Antarctica, 10 years after its first record in Maritime Antarctica (Maxwell Bay, King George Island). Its rapid spread across the island, despite geographic barriers such as glaciers, indicates successful adaptation to local environmental conditions and suggests this species is invasive. The mode of life of T. maculipennis, observed in natural and anthropogenous habitat and in laboratory conditions, is reported. The following adaptations enabled its invasion and existence within the sewage system in Antarctic scientific stations: the ability to survive in complete darkness, male ability to mate on the substrate surface without prior swarming in flight, and adaptation of terrestrial larvae to survive in semi-liquid food. Possible routes of introduction to Antarctica and between two bays on King George Island are discussed, as well as further research leading to the containment and eradication of this species.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience
Reference52 articles.
1. The Trichoceridae of Australia (Diptera);Alexander;Proceedings of the Linnean Society,1926
2. An insect introduction to the maritime Antarctic;Block;Biological Journal of the Linnean Society,1984
3. Un Coléoptère et un Diptère nouveaux de la Georgie du Sud;Bréthes;Comunicaciones del Museo Nacional de Historia Natural “Bernardino Rivadavia”,1925
4. Taxonomic notes on the larvae of British Diptera. II. Trichoceridae and Anisopodidae;Brindle;The Entomologist,1962
5. An automated methodology for differentiating rock from snow, clouds and sea in Antarctica from Landsat 8 imagery: a new rock outcrop map and area estimation for the entire Antarctic continent;Burton-Johnson;Cryosphere,2016