Flickinger Haley D, Dukes Jeffrey S
Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.
Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2024 Dec;30(12):e17612. doi: 10.1111/gcb.17612.
Human actions have led to large-scale shifts in the distributions of species, which have accelerated over recent decades. Two contributing factors include the introduction of non-native species to new regions, and more recently, the shift of species into new ranges to track a human-altered climate. While the context of these species redistributions is different, we argue here that scientists studying the effects of either invasion or range shifting are interested in the same underlying mechanistic questions: (1) What traits make a species likely to survive in a new location? and (2) Which recipient ecosystems are likely to support a newly arrived species? A survey of the theoretical literature surrounding these topics demonstrates the usefulness of this comparison and highlights key differences between range shifting and invasion in factors including genetic diversity, climatic tolerance, local adaptation, and coevolutionary history. This review does not support the blanket application of an invasion framework to climate change-induced range shifts. However, we suggest the use of modified invasion theories, experimental designs, and risk assessments could aid in predicting outcomes and prioritizing management resources for climate-threatened species.
人类活动已导致物种分布的大规模变化,近几十年来这种变化加速。两个促成因素包括将非本地物种引入新区域,以及最近物种为追踪人类改变的气候而转移到新的分布范围。虽然这些物种重新分布的背景不同,但我们在此认为,研究入侵或分布范围变化影响的科学家关注的是相同的潜在机制问题:(1)哪些特征使物种有可能在新地点生存?(2)哪些受体生态系统可能支持新到达的物种?对围绕这些主题的理论文献进行的调查表明了这种比较的有用性,并突出了在遗传多样性、气候耐受性、局部适应性和共同进化历史等因素方面分布范围变化与入侵之间的关键差异。本综述不支持将入侵框架一概应用于气候变化引起的分布范围变化。然而,我们建议使用经过修改的入侵理论、实验设计和风险评估,这有助于预测结果并为受气候威胁的物种确定管理资源的优先次序。