| Literature DB >> 32366920 |
Vivien Louppe1, Boris Leroy2, Anthony Herrel3, Géraldine Veron4.
Abstract
Invasive alien species represent one of the major factors of global loss of biodiversity and disruption of natural ecosystems. The small Indian mongoose, Urva auropunctata, is considered one of the wild carnivore species with the greatest negative impact on global biodiversity. Understanding of the factors underpinning the species' distribution and potential dispersion in a context of climate change thus appears crucial in the conservation of native ecosystems. Here we modelled the current and future climatically favourable areas for the small Indian mongoose using Ecological Niche Modelling based on data sets filtrated in environmental spaces. Projections from these models show extensive current favourable geographical areas, covering continental and insular regions within tropical and sub-tropical latitudes. Moreover, predictions for 2050 reveal that climate change is likely to expand current favourable areas north of the current favourable spaces, particularly in Eastern Europe. This climate-induced expansion is particularly worrisome given that the species is already spreading in the Balkan region. Our projections suggest that it is very likely that the small Indian mongoose will have an increasing influence on ecosystems and biodiversity in Europe by 2050.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32366920 PMCID: PMC7198557 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-64502-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Occurrences of small Indian mongoose used in the present study. Green circles correspond to occurrences in the native range of the species. Orange circles correspond to occurrences in the introduced range of the species.
Codes and descriptions of the bioclimatic variables and General Circulation Models selected for use in our models.
| Code | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| Bioclimatic variables | Bio 2 | Mean diurnal range (mean of monthly (max temp - min temp)) |
| Bio 7 | Temperature annual range | |
| Bio 10 | Mean temperature of the warmest quarter | |
| Bio 13 | Precipitation of the wettest month | |
| Bio 19 | Precipitation of the coldest quarter | |
| General Circulation Models | CNRM-CM5 | Centre National de Recherches Météorologiques, France |
| GISS-E2-R | NASA Godard Institute for Space Studies, U.S.A. | |
| MIROC-ESM-CHEM | Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology;Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute (The University of Tokyo);National Institute for Envionmental Studies, Japan |
Figure 2Analyses of environmental space shifts between the native range and the regions of introduction of the small Indian mongoose. (a) Environmental occupancy of U. auropunctata in native and non-native ranges along the two first axes of the PCA, and tests of niche overlap, niche equivalence and niche similarity between the native and the invaded areas niches. Grey to black gradients in native range graph represent the density of occurrence. Solid lines represent 100% of the available environmental space. Dashed lines represent 50% of the environmental space. (b) Occupancy of the niche along each variable gradient. A solid red arrow represents the shift of the non-native niche along the variable gradient. A dashed red arrow represents the shift of the available conditions in the non-native range. Solid lines represent 100% of available environmental space. Abscissa axes for precipitation variables are log-transformed to improve clarity. (c) Contribution of the bioclimatic variables to the two first axes of the PCA, and percentage of inertia explained by the two axes.
Figure 3Variable importance and response curves of the favourability value predicted by the models. Dashed blue lines represent favourability threshold. Solid blue lines represent the favourable range along the variable gradient.
Figure 4Projection of current global bioclimatic favourability for the small Indian mongoose with focus on regions where the species has been introduced. Locations where the species is currently present are indicated (Lesser Antilles: Puerto Rico, Vieques, St Thomas, Tortola, St Croix, St Martin, St Kitts, Nevis, Antigua, Guadeloupe, Fajou, La Désirade, Marie-Galante, Martinique, St Lucia, Barbados, St Vincent, Carriacou, Grenada, and Trinidad). Figure generated using the software R v3.5 (https://www.r-project.org) and QGIS v2.14.20 (https://qgis.org/).
Figure 5Projection of futur global bioclimatic favourability for the small Indian mongoose. Predicted favourable range change for U. auropunctata by 2050 according to scenario RCP8.5. Unfavourable: areas that are currently unfavourable and predicted to remain unfavourable in the future; Become unfavourable: areas currently favourable and predicted to become unfavourable in the future; Maintained favourable: areas that are currently favourable and predicted to stay favourable in the future; Newly favourable: areas that are currently unfavourable and which are predicted to become favourable in the future. Figure generated using the software R v3.5 (https://www.r-project.org) and QGIS v2.14.20 (https://qgis.org/).