Data from: Modeling spatial expansion of invasive alien species: relative contributions of environmental and anthropogenic factors to the spreading of the harlequin ladybird in France
Species distribution models (SDM) have often been used to predict the potential ranges of introduced species and prioritize management strategies. However, this approach assumes equilibrium between occurrences and environmental gradients, an assumption which is violated during the invasion process,...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Dataset |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext bestellen |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Species distribution models (SDM) have often been used to predict the
potential ranges of introduced species and prioritize management
strategies. However, this approach assumes equilibrium between occurrences
and environmental gradients, an assumption which is violated during the
invasion process, where many suitable sites are empty because the species
has not yet reached them. Here we considered the invasive ladybird
Harmonia axyridis as a case study to show the benefits of using a dynamic
colonization–extinction model that does not assume equilibrium. We used a
multi-year occupancy model incorporating environmental, anthropogenic and
neighborhood effects, to identify factors that explained spreading
variation of this species in France from 2004, when only a few occupied
sites were detected, to 2011. We found that anthropogenic factors
(urbanization, agriculture, vineyards, and presence/absence of highways)
explained more variation in the diffusion process than environmental
factors (winter and summer temperatures, wind-speed, and rainfall). The
surface of urbanization was the major anthropogenic factor increasing the
probability of colonization. The average summer temperature was the main
environmental factor affecting colonization, with a negative effect when
high or low. The neighborhood effect revealed that colonization was mostly
influenced by contributions coming from a radius of 24 km around the focal
cell. The contribution of neighborhood decreases over time, suggesting
that H. axyridis is reaching its equilibrium in France. This is confirmed
by the small discrepancy observed between the performance of our approach
and a SDM approach when predicting a single year occupancy pattern at the
end of the study period. Our approach has the advantage of explicitly
modelling the state of the biological system during the spatial expansion
and identifying colonization constraints. This allows managers to explore
the effect of different actions on the system at key moments of the
invasion process, hence providing a powerful approach to prioritize
management strategies. |
---|---|
DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.jg613 |