| Literature DB >> 33883555 |
Sven Bacher1, Antoine Guisan2,3, Olivier Broennimann4,5, Blaise Petitpierre2, Mathieu Chevalier2, Manuela González-Suárez6, Jonathan M Jeschke7,8,9, Jonathan Rolland10,11, Sarah M Gray1.
Abstract
One key hypothesis explaining the fate of exotic species introductions posits that the establishment of a self-sustaining population in the invaded range can only succeed within conditions matching the native climatic niche. Yet, this hypothesis remains untested for individual release events. Using a dataset of 979 introductions of 173 mammal species worldwide, we show that climate-matching to the realized native climatic niche, measured by a new Niche Margin Index (NMI), is a stronger predictor of establishment success than most previously tested life-history attributes and historical factors. Contrary to traditional climatic suitability metrics derived from species distribution models, NMI is based on niche margins and provides a measure of how distant a site is inside or, importantly, outside the niche. Besides many applications in research in ecology and evolution, NMI as a measure of native climatic niche-matching in risk assessments could improve efforts to prevent invasions and avoid costly eradications.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33883555 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22693-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919