Human-mediated introductions of Australian acacias - a global experiment in biogeography

Aim  Australian acacias (1012 recognized species native to Australia, which were previously grouped in Acacia subgenus Phyllodineae) have been moved extensively around the world by humans over the past 250 years. This has created the opportunity to explore how evolutionary, ecological, historical an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diversity & distributions 2011-09, Vol.17 (5), p.771-787
Hauptverfasser: Richardson, David M., Carruthers, Jane, Hui, Cang, Impson, Fiona A. C., Miller, Joseph T., Robertson, Mark P., Rouget, Mathieu, Le Roux, Johannes J., Wilson, John R. U.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aim  Australian acacias (1012 recognized species native to Australia, which were previously grouped in Acacia subgenus Phyllodineae) have been moved extensively around the world by humans over the past 250 years. This has created the opportunity to explore how evolutionary, ecological, historical and sociological factors interact to affect the distribution, usage, invasiveness and perceptions of a globally important group of plants. This editorial provides the background for the 20 papers in this special issue of Diversity and Distributions that focusses on the global cross‐disciplinary experiment of introduced Australian acacias. Location  Australia and global. Methods  The papers of the special issue are discussed in the context of a unified framework for biological invasions. Distributions of species were mapped across Australia, their representation in bioclimatic zones examined and the potential global distribution of the group modelled. By collating a variety of different lists, we determined which Australian acacias have reached different stages in the introduction‐naturalization‐invasion continuum in different parts of the world. Paradigms and key research questions relating to barriers to invasion, stages of invasion and management perceptions are sketched. Results  According to our global database of Australian acacia records, 386 species have been moved outside Australia by human agency, 71 species are naturalized or weedy, and 23 are unequivocally invasive. Climatic models suggest that about a third of the world’s land surface is climatically suitable for Australian acacias. Many species are commercially important crops or are useful for other purposes and have been extensively planted, and many different human perceptions of Australian acacias exist in different parts of the world. The papers in the special issue cover all the barriers, stages and processes that define biological invasions and touch on many aspects: history and the human dimension; aspects of the species pool; species traits; biotic interactions; climate and niche; and management. Main conclusions  Australian acacias are an excellent model group for examining interactions between evolutionary, ecological and socio‐economic drivers of species introductions. New insights have emerged on the biological, ecological and evolutionary correlates of naturalization and invasion, but human usage factors permeate all explanatory models. Understanding and managing introduced Australian ac
ISSN:1366-9516
1472-4642
DOI:10.1111/j.1472-4642.2011.00824.x