POUTEAU, R., W. THUILLER, C. HOBOHM, C. BRUNER, B.J. CONN, W. DAWSON, M.D. DECHOUM, A.L. EBEL, F. ESSL, O. FRAGMAN-SAPIR, T. FRISTOE, N. JOGAN, H. KREFT, B. LENZNER, C. MEYER, J. PERGL, P. PYSEK, A. VERKHOZINA, I.P. WEIGELT, Q. YANG, E. ZYKOVA, S. ACIC, E. AGRILLO, F. ATTORRE, I. BERGAMINI, C. BERG, E. BERGMEIER, I. BIURRUN, S. BOCH, Gianmaria BONARI, Z. BOTTA-DUKAT, H. BRUELHEIDE, J.A. CAMPOS, A. CARNI, L. CASELLA, M.L. CARRANZA, Milan CHYTRÝ, R. CUSTEREVSKA, M. DE SANCTIS, J. DENGLER, P. DIMOPOULOS, R. EJRNAES, J. EWALD, G. FANELLI, F. FERNANDEZ-GONZ, R.G. GAVILAN, J.C. GEGOUT, R. HAVEMAN, M. ISERMANN, U. JANDT, F. JANSEN, B. JIMENEZ-ALFARO, A. KAVGACI, L. KHANINA, Ilona KNOLLOVÁ, A. KUZEMKO, M. LEBEDEVA, J. LENOIR, T. LYSENKO, Corrado MARCENO', V. MARTYNENKO, J.E. MOESLUND, R. PATSCH, R. PIELECH, V. RASOMAVICIUS, I. DE RONDE, E. RUPRECHT, S. RUSINA, P. SHIROKIKH, J. SIBIK, U. SILC, A. STANISCI, Z. STANCIC, J.C. SVENNING, G. SWACHA, P.D. TURTUREANU, M. VALACHOVIC, K. VASSILEV, S. YAMALOV and M. VAN KLEUNEN. Climate and socio-economic factors explain differences between observed and expected naturalization patterns of European plants around the world. Global ecology and biogeography. HOBOKEN: WILEY, 2021, vol. 30, No 7, p. 1514-1531. ISSN 1466-822X. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/geb.13316.
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Basic information
Original name Climate and socio-economic factors explain differences between observed and expected naturalization patterns of European plants around the world
Authors POUTEAU, R., W. THUILLER, C. HOBOHM, C. BRUNER, B.J. CONN, W. DAWSON, M.D. DECHOUM, A.L. EBEL, F. ESSL, O. FRAGMAN-SAPIR, T. FRISTOE, N. JOGAN, H. KREFT, B. LENZNER, C. MEYER, J. PERGL, P. PYSEK, A. VERKHOZINA, I.P. WEIGELT, Q. YANG, E. ZYKOVA, S. ACIC, E. AGRILLO, F. ATTORRE, I. BERGAMINI, C. BERG, E. BERGMEIER, I. BIURRUN, S. BOCH, Gianmaria BONARI (380 Italy, belonging to the institution), Z. BOTTA-DUKAT, H. BRUELHEIDE, J.A. CAMPOS, A. CARNI, L. CASELLA, M.L. CARRANZA, Milan CHYTRÝ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), R. CUSTEREVSKA, M. DE SANCTIS, J. DENGLER, P. DIMOPOULOS, R. EJRNAES, J. EWALD, G. FANELLI, F. FERNANDEZ-GONZ, R.G. GAVILAN, J.C. GEGOUT, R. HAVEMAN, M. ISERMANN, U. JANDT, F. JANSEN, B. JIMENEZ-ALFARO, A. KAVGACI, L. KHANINA, Ilona KNOLLOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), A. KUZEMKO, M. LEBEDEVA, J. LENOIR, T. LYSENKO, Corrado MARCENO' (380 Italy, belonging to the institution), V. MARTYNENKO, J.E. MOESLUND, R. PATSCH, R. PIELECH, V. RASOMAVICIUS, I. DE RONDE, E. RUPRECHT, S. RUSINA, P. SHIROKIKH, J. SIBIK, U. SILC, A. STANISCI, Z. STANCIC, J.C. SVENNING, G. SWACHA, P.D. TURTUREANU, M. VALACHOVIC, K. VASSILEV, S. YAMALOV and M. VAN KLEUNEN.
Edition Global ecology and biogeography, HOBOKEN, WILEY, 2021, 1466-822X.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 10618 Ecology
Country of publisher United States of America
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Impact factor Impact factor: 6.909
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14310/21:00119075
Organization unit Faculty of Science
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/geb.13316
UT WoS 000656427700001
Keywords in English alien species; anthropogenic pressure; environmental driver; functional trait; global change; introduction pathway; naturalization; ornamental plant; sampling bias; species distribution model
Tags rivok
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Marie Šípková, DiS., učo 437722. Changed: 14/1/2022 16:13.
Abstract
Aim The number of naturalized (i.e. established) alien species has increased rapidly over recent centuries. Given the differences in environmental tolerances among species, little is known about what factors determine the extent to which the observed size of the naturalized range of a species and hence the extent to which the observed richness of naturalized species of a region approach their full potential. Here, we asked which region- and species-specific characteristics explain differences between observed and expected naturalizations. Location Global. Time period Present. Major taxa studied Vascular plants. Methods We determined the observed naturalized distribution outside Europe for 1,485 species endemic to Europe using the Global Naturalized Alien Flora (GloNAF) database and their expected distributions outside Europe using species distribution models. First, we investigated which of seven socio-economic factors related to introduction pathways, anthropogenic pressures and inventory effort best explained the differences between observed and expected naturalized European floras. Second, we examined whether distributional features, economic use and functional traits explain the extent to which species have filled their expected ranges outside Europe. Results In terms of suitable area, more than 95% of expected naturalizations of European plants were not yet observed. Species were naturalized in only 4.2% of their suitable regions outside of Europe (range filling) and in 0.4% of their unsuitable regions (range expansion). Anthropogenic habitat disturbance primarily explained the difference between observed and expected naturalized European floras, as did the number of treaties relevant to invasive species. Species of ornamental and economic value and with large specific leaf area performed better at filling and expanding beyond their expected range. Main conclusions The naturalization of alien plant species is explained by climate matching but also by the regional level of human development, the introduction pressure associated with the ornamental and economic values of the species and their adaptation to disturbed environments.
Links
GX19-28491X, research and development projectName: Centrum pro evropské vegetační syntézy (CEVS) (Acronym: CEVS)
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
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