Data from: Suitability of Laurentian Great Lakes for invasive species based on global species distribution models and local habitat
Efficient management and prevention of species invasions requires accurate prediction of where species of concern can arrive and persist. Species distribution models provide one way to identify potentially suitable habitat by developing the relationship between climate variables and species occurren...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Dataset |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext bestellen |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Efficient management and prevention of species invasions requires accurate
prediction of where species of concern can arrive and persist. Species
distribution models provide one way to identify potentially suitable
habitat by developing the relationship between climate variables and
species occurrence data. However, these models when applied to freshwater
invasions are complicated by two factors. The first is that the range
expansions that typically occur as part of the invasion process violate
standard species distribution model assumptions of data stationarity.
Second, predicting potential range of freshwater aquatic species is
complicated by the reliance on terrestrial climate measurements to develop
occurrence relationships for species that occur in aquatic environments.
To overcome these obstacles, we combined a recently developed algorithm
for species distribution modeling—range bagging—with newly available
aquatic habitat-specific information from the North American Great Lakes
region to predict suitable habitat for three potential invasive species:
golden mussel, killer shrimp, and northern snakehead. Range bagging may
more accurately predict relative suitability than other methods because it
focuses on the limits of the species environmental tolerances rather than
central tendency or “typical” cases. Overlaying the species distribution
model output with aquatic habitat-specific data then allowed for more
specific predictions of areas with high suitability. Our results indicate
there is suitable habitat for northern snakehead in the Great Lakes,
particularly shallow coastal habitats in the lower four Great Lakes where
literature suggests they will favor areas of wetland and submerged aquatic
vegetation. These coastal areas also offer the highest suitability for
golden mussel, but our models suggest they are marginal habitats.
Globally, the Great Lakes provide the closest match to the currently
invaded range of killer shrimp, but they appear to pose an intermediate
risk to the region. Range bagging provided reliable predictions when
assessed either by a standard test set or by tests for spatial
transferability, with golden mussel being the most difficult to accurately
predict. Our approach illustrates the strength of combining multiple
sources of data, while reiterating the need for increased measurement of
freshwater habitat at high spatial resolutions to improve the ability to
predict potential invasive species. |
---|---|
DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.d4144 |