| Nome: | Descrição: | Tamanho: | Formato: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11.63 MB | Adobe PDF |
Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
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
Descrição
Research Article
Palavras-chave
biological invasions CITES climate change land use change traded birds risk analysis
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Glob Change Biol. 2022;00:1–13
Editora
Wiley
