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Invasion hotspots for non-native plants in Australia under current and future climates

机译:当前和未来气候下澳大利亚非本地植物的入侵热点

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We apply the concept of biodiversity hotspot analysis (the identification of biogeographical regions of high species diversity) to identify invasion hotspots areas of potentially suitable climate for multiple non-native plant species in Australia under current and future climates. We used the species distribution model Maxent to model climate suitability surfaces for 72 taxa, recognized as Weeds of National Significance (WoNS) in Australia, under current and projected climate for 2020 and 2050. Current climate suitability layers were summed across all 72 species, and we observed two regions of high climatic suitability corresponding to the top 25th percentile of combined climatic suitability values across Australia. We defined these as potential invasion hotspots. Areas of climatic suitability equivalent to the hotspot regions were identified in the composite maps for 2020 and 2050, to track spatial changes in the hotspots over the two time steps. Two potential invasion hotspot regions were identified under current and projected climates: the south west corner of Western Australia (SW), and south eastern Australia (SE). Herbarium data confirmed the presence of 73% and 99% of those species predicted to be in each hotspot respectively, suggesting that the SE has greater invasion potential. The area of both hotspots was predicted to retract southward and towards the coast under future climate scenarios, reducing in size by 81% (SW) and 71% (SE) by 2050. This reduction was driven by the dominance of southern temperate invasive plant species in the WoNS list (47 of the 72), of which 44 were predicted to experience reductions in their bioclimatic range by 2050. While climate is likely to become less suitable for the majority of WoNS in the future, potential invasion hotspots based on climate suitability are likely to remain in the far south of eastern Australia, and in the far south west of Western Australia by 2050.
机译:我们采用生物多样性热点分析的概念(识别物种高度多样性的生物地理区域)来识别在当前和未来气候下可能适合澳大利亚多种非本地植物物种气候的入侵热点区域。我们使用物种分布模型Maxent对当前和预计的2020年和2050年气候下72种分类单元的气候适宜性表面进行建模,这些分类单元被公认为澳大利亚的国家重要杂草(WoNS)。对所有72种物种的当前气候适宜性层进行了汇总,我们观察到两个气候适宜性高的区域,对应于整个澳大利亚的综合气候适宜性值的前25个百分位。我们将这些定义为潜在的入侵热点。在2020年和2050年的合成图中,确定了与热点区域等效的气候适应区域,以跟踪两个时间步长中热点的空间变化。在当前和预计的气候下,确定了两个潜在的入侵热点地区:西澳大利亚州的西南角(SW)和澳大利亚东南部的SE(SE)。植物标本室的数据证实了分别在每个热点中存在这些物种的73%和99%的存在,这表明SE具有更大的入侵潜力。预计在未来的气候情景下,两个热点的面积都将向南和向海岸后退,到2050年,面积将分别减少81%(SW)和71%(SE)。这一减少是由于南部温带入侵植物的优势在WoNS清单中(72个中的47个)中,其中有44个预计到2050年其生物气候范围将减少。尽管未来气候可能不太适合大多数WoNS,但基于气候适宜性的潜在入侵热点到2050年,它们很可能仍将保留在澳大利亚东部的最南端和西澳大利亚州的最西南端。

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