Laboratoire d'Écologie Alpine, CNRS, LECA, University of Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble, France.
International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Jan;24(1):e289-e302. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13879. Epub 2017 Sep 21.
Across the globe, invasive alien species cause severe environmental changes, altering species composition and ecosystem functions. So far, mountain areas have mostly been spared from large-scale invasions. However, climate change, land-use abandonment, the development of tourism and the increasing ornamental trade will weaken the barriers to invasions in these systems. Understanding how alien species will react and how native communities will influence their success is thus of prime importance in a management perspective. Here, we used a spatially and temporally explicit simulation model to forecast invasion risks in a protected mountain area in the French Alps under future conditions. We combined scenarios of climate change, land-use abandonment and tourism-linked increases in propagule pressure to test if the spread of alien species in the region will increase in the future. We modelled already naturalized alien species and new ornamental plants, accounting for interactions among global change components, and also competition with the native vegetation. Our results show that propagule pressure and climate change will interact to increase overall species richness of both naturalized aliens and new ornamentals, as well as their upper elevational limits and regional range-sizes. Under climate change, woody aliens are predicted to more than double in range-size and herbaceous species to occupy up to 20% of the park area. In contrast, land-use abandonment will open new invasion opportunities for woody aliens, but decrease invasion probability for naturalized and ornamental alien herbs as a consequence of colonization by native trees. This emphasizes the importance of interactions with the native vegetation either for facilitating or potentially for curbing invasions. Overall, our work highlights an additional and previously underestimated threat for the fragile mountain flora of the Alps already facing climate changes, land-use transformations and overexploitation by tourism.
在全球范围内,入侵的外来物种会导致严重的环境变化,改变物种组成和生态系统功能。到目前为止,山区大多没有受到大规模入侵的影响。然而,气候变化、土地利用废弃、旅游业的发展和观赏植物贸易的增加,将削弱这些系统中入侵的障碍。因此,从管理的角度来看,了解外来物种将如何反应以及本地群落将如何影响它们的成功至关重要。在这里,我们使用了一个具有时空明确模拟模型来预测法国阿尔卑斯山保护区在未来条件下的入侵风险。我们结合了气候变化、土地利用废弃和与旅游业相关的繁殖体压力增加的情景,以测试该地区的外来物种传播是否会在未来增加。我们模拟了已经归化的外来物种和新的观赏植物,考虑了全球变化成分之间的相互作用,以及与本地植被的竞争。我们的结果表明,繁殖体压力和气候变化将相互作用,增加归化外来物种和新观赏植物的总物种丰富度,以及它们的高海拔上限和区域范围大小。在气候变化的情况下,木本外来物种的分布范围预计将增加一倍以上,草本物种将占据公园面积的 20%。相比之下,土地利用废弃将为木本外来物种开辟新的入侵机会,但由于本地树木的殖民化,归化和观赏外来草本植物的入侵概率会降低。这强调了与本地植被相互作用的重要性,无论是促进还是潜在地抑制入侵。总的来说,我们的工作突出了一个额外的、以前被低估的威胁,即脆弱的阿尔卑斯山植物群已经面临气候变化、土地利用转型和旅游业过度开发的威胁。