School of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
Institute of Biochemistry and Biology, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany.
Glob Chang Biol. 2024 Jul;30(7):e17399. doi: 10.1111/gcb.17399.
The ever-increasing and expanding globalisation of trade and transport underpins the escalating global problem of biological invasions. Developing biosecurity infrastructures is crucial to anticipate and prevent the transport and introduction of invasive alien species. Still, robust and defensible forecasts of potential invaders are rare, especially for species without known invasion history. Here, we aim to support decision-making by developing a quantitative invasion risk assessment tool based on invasion syndromes (i.e., generalising typical attributes of invasive alien species). We implemented a workflow based on 'Multiple Imputation with Chain Equation' to estimate invasion syndromes from imputed datasets of species' life-history and ecological traits and macroecological patterns. Importantly, our models disentangle the factors explaining (i) transport and introduction and (ii) establishment. We showcase our tool by modelling the invasion syndromes of 466 amphibians and reptile species with invasion history. Then, we project these models to amphibians and reptiles worldwide (16,236 species [c.76% global coverage]) to identify species with a risk of being unintentionally transported and introduced, and risk of establishing alien populations. Our invasion syndrome models showed high predictive accuracy with a good balance between specificity and generality. Unintentionally transported and introduced species tend to be common and thrive well in human-disturbed habitats. In contrast, those with established alien populations tend to be large-sized, are habitat generalists, thrive well in human-disturbed habitats, and have large native geographic ranges. We forecast that 160 amphibians and reptiles without known invasion history could be unintentionally transported and introduced in the future. Among them, 57 species have a high risk of establishing alien populations. Our reliable, reproducible, transferable, statistically robust and scientifically defensible quantitative invasion risk assessment tool is a significant new addition to the suite of decision-support tools needed for developing a future-proof preventative biosecurity globally.
贸易和运输的全球化程度不断加深,范围不断扩大,这是生物入侵这一日益严重的全球性问题的基础。发展生物安保基础设施对于预测和防止外来入侵物种的运输和引入至关重要。然而,对于没有已知入侵历史的物种,很少有强有力且合理的潜在入侵物种预测,特别是在没有已知入侵历史的情况下。在这里,我们旨在通过开发一种基于入侵综合征的定量入侵风险评估工具来支持决策,即概括外来入侵物种的典型特征。我们实施了一个基于“链方程的多重插补”的工作流程,从物种生活史和生态特征以及宏观生态模式的插补数据集中估算入侵综合征。重要的是,我们的模型可以分解解释(i)运输和引入以及(ii)建立的因素。我们通过对具有入侵历史的 466 种两栖动物和爬行动物的入侵综合征进行建模来展示我们的工具。然后,我们将这些模型投射到全世界的两栖动物和爬行动物(16236 种[约占全球覆盖范围的 76%])上,以确定具有被意外运输和引入以及建立外来种群风险的物种。我们的入侵综合征模型具有很高的预测准确性,特异性和通用性之间的平衡良好。意外运输和引入的物种往往很常见,并且在人类干扰的栖息地中茁壮成长。相比之下,那些具有建立外来种群的物种往往体型较大,是栖息地的通才,在人类干扰的栖息地中茁壮成长,并且具有较大的本地地理范围。我们预测,未来可能会有 160 种没有已知入侵历史的两栖动物和爬行动物被意外运输和引入。其中,有 57 种物种建立外来种群的风险很高。我们可靠、可重现、可转移、统计上稳健且具有科学防御能力的定量入侵风险评估工具是全球未来预防生物安保所需的一整套决策支持工具的重要新增内容。