Temperature extremes nip invasive macrophyte Cabomba caroliniana A. Gray in the bud: potential geographic distributions and risk assessment based on future climate change and anthropogenic influences

Xiaoqing Xian, Yuhan Qi, Haoxiang Zhao, Jingjing Cao, Tao Jia, Nianwan Yang, Fanghao Wan, Philip Weyl, Wan-xue Liu
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Abstract

Cabomba caroliniana A. Gray, an ornamental submerged plant indigenous to tropical America, has been introduced to numerous countries in Europe, Asia, and Oceania, impacting native aquatic ecosystems. Given this species is a popular aquarium plant and widely traded, there is a high risk of introduction and invasion into other environments. In the current study the potential global geographic distribution of C. caroliniana was predicted under the effects of climate change and human influence in an optimised MaxEnt model. The model used rigorously screened occurrence records of C. caroliniana from hydro informatic datasets and 20 associated influencing factors. The findings indicate that temperature and human-mediated activities significantly influenced the distribution of C. caroliniana. At present, C. caroliniana covers an area of approximately 1531×104 km2 of appropriate habitat, especially in the south-eastern parts of South, central and North America, Southeast Asia, eastern Australia, and most of Europe. The suitable regions are anticipated to expand under future climate scenarios; however, the dynamics of the changes vary between different extents of climate change. For example, C. caroliniana is expected to expand to higher latitudes, following global temperature increases under SSP1–2.6 and SSP2–4.5 scenarios, however, intolerance to temperature extremes may mediate invasion at higher latitudes under future extreme climate scenarios, e.g., SSP5–8.5. Owing to the severe impacts its invasion causes, early warning and stringent border quarantine processes are required to guard against the introduction of C. caroliniana especially in the invasion hotspots such as, Peru, Italy, and South Korea.
极端气温将入侵的大型藻类 Cabomba caroliniana A. Gray扼杀在萌芽状态:基于未来气候变化和人为影响的潜在地理分布和风险评估
Cabomba caroliniana A. Gray 是一种原产于美洲热带的观赏性沉水植物,已被引入欧洲、亚洲和大洋洲的许多国家,对当地的水生生态系统造成了影响。由于该物种是一种广受欢迎的水族馆植物,交易广泛,因此很有可能被引入和入侵到其他环境中。本研究通过优化 MaxEnt 模型,预测了在气候变化和人类影响的作用下,C. caroliniana 的潜在全球地理分布。该模型使用了水文信息数据集中经过严格筛选的 C. caroliniana 出现记录和 20 个相关影响因素。研究结果表明,温度和人类活动对 C. caroliniana 的分布有显著影响。目前,C. caroliniana 的适宜栖息地面积约为 1531×104 平方公里,特别是在南美洲、中美洲和北美洲的东南部、东南亚、澳大利亚东部和欧洲大部分地区。在未来的气候情景下,预计适宜区域将扩大;然而,不同程度的气候变化会带来不同的动态变化。例如,在 SSP1-2.6 和 SSP2-4.5 情景下,随着全球气温升高,C. caroliniana 预计会向更高纬度地区扩展,然而,在未来极端气候情景下,如 SSP5-8.5 情景下,对极端温度的不耐性可能会影响对更高纬度地区的入侵。由于 C. caroliniana 的入侵会造成严重影响,因此需要早期预警和严格的边境检疫程序来防止 C. caroliniana 的引入,尤其是在秘鲁、意大利和韩国等入侵热点地区。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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