Bertelsmeier Cleo, Ollier Sébastien, Liebhold Andrew, Keller Laurent
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Ecology, Systematics and Evolution, Univ. Paris-Sud, CNRS, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France.
Nat Ecol Evol. 2017 Jul;1(7):0184. doi: 10.1038/s41559-017-0184. Epub 2017 Jun 22.
Human trade and travel are breaking-down biogeographic barriers, resulting in shifts in the geographical distribution of organisms, yet it remains largely unknown whether different alien species generally follow similar spatiotemporal colonization patterns and how such patterns are driven by trends in global trade. Here, we analyse the global distribution of 241 alien ant species and show that these species comprise four distinct groups that inherently differ in their worldwide distribution from that of native species. The global spread of these four distinct species groups has been greatly, but differentially, influenced by major events in recent human history, in particular historical waves of globalization (approximately 1850-1914, and 1960-present), world wars and global recessions. Species in these four groups also differ in six important morphological and life-history traits and their degree of invasiveness. Combining spatiotemporal distribution data with life-history trait information provides valuable insight into the processes driving biological invasions and facilitates identification of species most likely to become invasive in the future.
人类贸易和旅行正在打破生物地理屏障,导致生物的地理分布发生变化,然而,不同的外来物种是否普遍遵循相似的时空定殖模式,以及这些模式如何受到全球贸易趋势的驱动,在很大程度上仍不为人知。在这里,我们分析了241种外来蚂蚁物种的全球分布情况,结果表明,这些物种可分为四个不同的组,它们在全球范围内的分布与本地物种存在本质差异。这四个不同物种组的全球扩散受到近代人类历史上重大事件的极大影响,但影响方式各不相同,尤其是全球化的历史浪潮(约1850年至1914年,以及1960年至今)、世界大战和全球衰退。这四个组中的物种在六个重要的形态和生活史特征及其入侵程度方面也存在差异。将时空分布数据与生活史特征信息相结合,有助于深入了解生物入侵的驱动过程,并有助于识别未来最有可能成为入侵物种的物种。