The faunal Ponto-Caspianization of central and western European waterways
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Published:2023-04-19
Issue:8
Volume:25
Page:2613-2629
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ISSN:1387-3547
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Container-title:Biological Invasions
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biol Invasions
Author:
Soto IsmaelORCID, Cuthbert Ross N., Ricciardi Anthony, Ahmed Danish A., Altermatt Florian, Schäfer Ralf B., Archambaud-Suard Gaït, Bonada Núria, Cañedo-Argüelles Miguel, Csabai Zoltán, Datry Thibault, Dick Jaimie T. A., Floury Mathieu, Forio Marie Anne Eurie, Forcellini Maxence, Fruget Jean-François, Goethals Peter, Haase Peter, Hudgins Emma J., Jones J. Iwan, Kouba Antonín, Leitner Patrick, Lizée Marie-Helène, Maire Anthony, Murphy John F., Ozolins Davis, Rasmussen Jes Jessen, Schmidt-Kloiber Astrid, Skuja Agnija, Stubbington Rachel, Van der Lee Gea H., Vannevel Rudy, Várbíró Gábor, Verdonschot Ralf C. M., Wiberg-Larsen Peter, Haubrock Phillip J., Briski Elizabeta
Abstract
AbstractAs alien invasive species are a key driver of biodiversity loss, understanding patterns of rapidly changing global species compositions depends upon knowledge of invasive species population dynamics and trends at large scales. Within this context, the Ponto-Caspian region is among the most notable donor regions for aquatic invasive species in Europe. Using macroinvertebrate time series collected over 52 years (1968–2020) at 265 sites across 11 central and western European countries, we examined the occurrences, invasion rates, and abundances of freshwater Ponto-Caspian fauna. We examined whether: (i) successive Ponto-Caspian invasions follow a consistent pattern of composition pioneered by the same species, and (ii) Ponto-Caspian invasion accelerates subsequent invasion rates. In our dataset, Ponto-Caspian macroinvertebrates increased from two species in 1972 to 29 species in 2012. This trend was parallelled by a non-significant increasing trend in the abundances of Ponto-Caspian taxa. Trends in Ponto-Caspian invader richness increased significantly over time. We found a relatively uniform distribution of Ponto-Caspian macroinvertebrates across Europe without any relation to the distance to their native region. The Ponto-Caspian species that arrived first were often bivalves (46.5% of cases), particularly Dreissena polymorpha, followed secondarily by amphipods (83.8%; primarily Chelicorophium curvispinum and Dikerogammarus villosus). The time between consecutive invasions decreased significantly at our coarse regional scale, suggesting that previous alien establishments may facilitate invasions of subsequent taxa. Should alien species continue to translocate from the Ponto-Caspian region, our results suggest a high potential for their future invasion success highly connected central and western European waters. However, each species’ population may decline after an initial ‘boom’ phase or after the arrival of new invasive species, resulting in different alien species dominating over time.
Funder
Jihočeská Univerzita v Českých Budějovicích University of South Bohemia in České Budějovice
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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