Ecosystem engineer

An ecosystem engineer is any organism that creates or modifies habitats. Jones et al. (1994) identified two different types of ecosystem engineers:

Humans are very significant allogenic engineers, though this interaction is more studied in the field of human ecology.

Introduced species are often ecosystem engineers. Kudzu, a leguminous plant introduced to the southeast U.S., changes the distribution and number of animal and bird species in the areas it invades. It also crowds out native plant species. The zebra mussel is an ecosystem engineer in North America. By providing refuge from predators, it encourages the growth of freshwater invertebrates through increasing microhabitats. Light penetration into infected lakes also improves, resulting in an increase in algae.

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