Biology:List of invasive species in Florida
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Revision as of 09:39, 22 August 2021 by imported>MainAI5 (over-write)
Invasive species in Florida are introduced species of fauna−animals and flora−plants that are established and have naturalized within Florida.[1]
Native plants and animals can become threatened endangered species from the spread of invasive species in natural habitats and/or developed areas (e.g. agriculture, transport, settlement).
Animals
Some of the invasive animal species include:
Mammals
- Brown rat [1]
- Black rat [2]
- Coypu [3]
- Capybara [4]
- Prairie dog [5]
- House mouse [6]
- American bison [7]
- Mustang [8]
- Red deer [9]
- Sambar deer [10]
- Jamaican fruit-eating bat [11]
- Gambian pouch rat [12]
- Pallas's mastiff bat [13]
- White-nosed coati [14]
- Wild boar [15]
- Rhesus macaque [16]
- Common squirrel monkey [17]
- Crab-eating macaque [18]
- Vervet monkey [19]
- Mexican red-bellied squirrel [20]
- Feral cat [21]
Birds
- House finch [22]
- Scarlet ibis [23]
- Indian peafowl [24]
- Monk parakeet [25]
- Nanday parakeet [26]
- Tui parakeet [27]
- Blue-and-yellow macaw [28]
- Golden-collared macaw [29]
- Scarlet macaw [30]
- Military macaw [31]
- Red-shouldered macaw [32]
- Chestnut-fronted macaw [33]
- Hyacinth macaw [34]
- Rock dove [35]
- Inca dove [36]
- White-winged dove [37]
- Ring-necked dove [38]
- Feral pigeon [39]
- Eurasian collared dove [40]
- Feral chicken [41]
Reptiles
- Red-eared slider [42]
- Olive ridley sea turtle [43]
- Spectacled caiman [44]
- Brown anole [45]
- Black spiny-tailed iguana [46]
- Common house gecko [47]
- Green iguana [48]
- Nile monitor [49]
- Burmese python [50]
- African rock python [51]
- Reticulated python [52]
- Common boa [53]
- Green anaconda [54]
- Yellow anaconda [55]
- Eastern green mamba [56]
- Western green mamba [57]
- Egyptian cobra [58]
- King cobra [59]
- Argentine black and white tegu [60]
- brahminy blind snake [61]
- Guatemalan beaded lizard [62]
- Veiled chameleon [63]
- Panther chameleon [64]
- Jackson's chameleon [65]
- Oustalet's chameleon [66]
- Senegal chameleon [67]
- Meller's chameleon [68]
- White-lined chameleon [69]
- Nile crocodile [70]
Fish
- Clarias batrachus (walking catfish) [71]
- Mayaheros urophthalmus (Mayan cichlid) [72]
- Oreochromis aureus (blue tilapia) [73]
- Cichla (peacock bass) [74]
- Channa marulius (bullseye snakehead) [75]
- Cichlasoma bimaculatum (black acara) [76]
- Monopterus albus (Asian swamp eel) [77]
- Chitala ornata (clown knifefish) [78]
- Astronotus ocellatus (oscar fish) [79]
- Cichlasoma managuense (jaguar guapote) [80]
- Cyprinus carpio (common carp) [81]
- Ctenopharyngodon (grass carp) [82]
- Pelmatolapia mariae (spotted tilapia) [83]
- Hoplosternum littorale (brown hoplo) [84]
- Heterotilapia buttikoferi (zebra tilapia) [85]
- Cromileptes altivelis (humpback grouper) [86]
- Amphilophus citrinellus (Midas cichlid) [87]
- Parachromis dovii (wolf cichlid) [88]
- Leporinus fasciatus (Banded leporinus) [89]
- Heros severus (Banded cichlid) [90]
marine invasives
- Pterios volitans (lion fish) [91]
Amphibians
- Cuban tree frog [92]
- Cane toad [93]
- Greenhouse frog [94]
- Common coquí [95]
- Upland coqui [96]
- Australian green tree frog [97]
- Asian common toad [98]
- Blomberg's toad [99]
- Banded bullfrog [100]
- Mexican leaf frog [101]
- Sierran chorus frog [102]
- Red-eyed treefrog [103]
- "Paddletail newt" [104]
- Chinese fire belly newt [105]
- Japanese fire belly newt [106]
Invertebrates
- Corbicula fluminea' (Asian clam) [107]
- Metamasius callizona (Mexican bromeliad weevil) [108]
- Paratachardina pseudolobata (lobate lac scale) [109]
- Euglossa dilemma (green orchid bee) [110]
- Pomacea maculata (island applesnail) [111]
- Lissachatina fulica (African giant land snail) [112]
- Platydemus manokwari (New Guinea flatworm) [113]
See also
- Invasive species in the United States
- List of invasive species in the Everglades
- List of invasive plant species in Florida
- List of invasive marine fish in Florida
- Burmese pythons in Florida
References
- ↑ "Florida's Exotic Fish and Wildlife". Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. http://myfwc.com/wildlifehabitats/nonnatives/.