Panlasigui Stephanie, Davis Amy J S, Mangiante Michael J, Darling John A
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Engineering participant, US Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC, United States.
National Exposure Research Laboratory, US Environmental Research Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC, United States.
Biol Conserv. 2018 Aug;224:199-208. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2018.05.019.
Non-native species pose one of the greatest threats to native biodiversity, and can have severe negative impacts in freshwater ecosystems. Identifying regions of spatial overlap between high freshwater biodiversity and high invasion pressure may thus better inform the prioritization of freshwater conservation efforts. We employ geospatial analysis of species distribution data to investigate the potential threat of non-native species to aquatic animal taxa across the continental United States. We mapped non-native aquatic plant and animal species richness and cumulative invasion pressure to estimate overall negative impact associated with species introductions. These distributions were compared to distributions of native aquatic animal taxa derived from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) database. To identify hotspots of native biodiversity we mapped total species richness, number of threatened and endangered species, and a community index of species rarity calculated at the watershed scale. An overall priority index allowed identification of watersheds experiencing high pressure from non-native species and also exhibiting high native biodiversity conservation value. While priority regions are roughly consistent with previously reported prioritization maps for the US, we also recognize novel priority areas characterized by moderate-to-high native diversity but extremely high invasion pressure. We further compared priority areas with existing conservation protections as well as projected future threats associated with land use change. Our findings suggest that many regions of elevated freshwater biodiversity value are compromised by high invasion pressure, and are poorly safeguarded by existing conservation mechanisms and are likely to experience significant additional stresses in the future.
外来物种对本地生物多样性构成了最大威胁之一,并且会对淡水生态系统产生严重的负面影响。因此,确定高淡水生物多样性与高入侵压力的空间重叠区域,可能会为淡水保护工作的优先排序提供更好的参考依据。我们利用物种分布数据的地理空间分析,来调查外来物种对美国大陆水生动物类群的潜在威胁。我们绘制了外来水生植物和动物物种丰富度以及累积入侵压力图,以估计与物种引入相关的总体负面影响。这些分布与源自国际自然保护联盟(IUCN)数据库的本地水生动物类群分布进行了比较。为了确定本地生物多样性的热点地区,我们绘制了总物种丰富度、受威胁和濒危物种数量,以及在流域尺度上计算的物种稀有度群落指数图。一个总体优先级指数能够识别出既面临外来物种高压又具有高本地生物多样性保护价值的流域。虽然优先区域大致与之前报道的美国优先排序图一致,但我们也识别出了一些新的优先区域,其特点是本地多样性为中度到高度,但入侵压力极高。我们还将优先区域与现有的保护措施以及与土地利用变化相关的预计未来威胁进行了比较。我们的研究结果表明,许多淡水生物多样性价值较高的地区受到高入侵压力的影响,现有保护机制对其保护不力,并且未来可能会面临重大的额外压力。