Potential for invasion of traded birds under climate and land-cover change

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  • Babak Naimi
  • César Capinha
  • Joana Ribeiro
  • Rahbek, Carsten
  • Diederik Strubbe
  • Luís Reino
  • Miguel B. Araújo

Humans have moved species away from their native ranges since the Neolithic, but globalization accelerated the rate at which species are being moved. We fitted more than half million distribution models for 610 traded bird species on the CITES list to examine the separate and joint effects of global climate and land-cover change on their potential end-of-century distributions. We found that climate-induced suitability for modelled invasive species increases with latitude, because traded birds are mainly of tropical origin and much of the temperate region is ‘tropicalizing.’ Conversely, the tropics are becoming more arid, thus limiting the potential from cross-continental invasion by tropical species. This trend is compounded by forest loss around the tropics since most traded birds are forest dwellers. In contrast, net gains in forest area across the temperate region could compound climate change effects and increase the potential for colonization of low-latitude birds. Climate change has always led to regional redistributions of species, but the combination of human transportation, climate, and land-cover changes will likely accelerate the redistribution of species globally, increasing chances of alien species successfully invading non-native lands. Such process of biodiversity homogenization can lead to emergence of non-analogue communities with unknown environmental and socioeconomic consequences.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftGlobal Change Biology
Vol/bind28
Udgave nummer19
Sider (fra-til)5654-5666
Antal sider13
ISSN1354-1013
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
This research was funded by FEDER through the Operational Competitiveness Program COMPETE, and by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) ALIENTRADE project (PTDC/BIA‐ECO/30931/2017‐POCI‐01‐0145‐FEDER‐030931). CC was supported by FCT (CEECIND/02037/2017; UIDB/00295/2020 and UIDP/00295/2020). JR acknowledges support from FCT through a postdoc grant INTERREG Europe INVALIS—Protecting European Biodiversity from Invasive Alien Species “PGI05271”, funded by the European Union and project ALIENTRADE. LR was supported through FCT, IP, under the program of “Stimulus of Scientific Employment—Individual Support” with the contract “CEECIND/00445/2017”.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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