Evolutionary imbalance, climate and human history jointly shape the global biogeography of alien plants

被引:0
|
作者
Trevor S. Fristoe
Jonas Bleilevens
Nicole L. Kinlock
Qiang Yang
Zhijie Zhang
Wayne Dawson
Franz Essl
Holger Kreft
Jan Pergl
Petr Pyšek
Patrick Weigelt
Jean-Marc Dufour-Dror
Alexander N. Sennikov
Pawel Wasowicz
Kristine B. Westergaard
Mark van Kleunen
机构
[1] University of Konstanz,Ecology, Department of Biology
[2] Heidelberg University,Centre for Organismal Studies (COS) Heidelberg, Biodiversity and Plant Systematics
[3] The German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig,Department of Biosciences
[4] Durham University,BioInvasions, Global Change, Macroecology Group, Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research
[5] University of Vienna,Biodiversity, Macroecology & Biogeography
[6] University of Goettingen,Centre of Biodiversity and Sustainable Land Use (CBL)
[7] University of Goettingen,Department of Ecology, Faculty of Science
[8] Department of Invasion Ecology,Botanical Museum, Finnish Museum of Natural History
[9] Institute of Botany,Department of Natural History
[10] Czech Academy of Sciences,Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation
[11] Charles University,undefined
[12] University of Helsinki,undefined
[13] Icelandic Institute of Natural History,undefined
[14] Borgir vid Nordurslod,undefined
[15] NTNU University Museum,undefined
[16] Norwegian University of Science and Technology,undefined
[17] Taizhou University,undefined
来源
Nature Ecology & Evolution | 2023年 / 7卷
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摘要
Human activities are causing global biotic redistribution, translocating species and providing them with opportunities to establish populations beyond their native ranges. Species originating from certain global regions, however, are disproportionately represented among naturalized aliens. The evolutionary imbalance hypothesis posits that differences in absolute fitness among biogeographic divisions determine outcomes when biotas mix. Here, we compile data from native and alien distributions for nearly the entire global seed plant flora and find that biogeographic conditions predicted to drive evolutionary imbalance act alongside climate and anthropogenic factors to shape flows of successful aliens among regional biotas. Successful aliens tend to originate from large, biodiverse regions that support abundant populations and where species evolve against a diverse backdrop of competitors and enemies. We also reveal that these same native distribution characteristics are shared among the plants that humans select for cultivation and economic use. In addition to influencing species’ innate potentials as invaders, we therefore suggest that evolutionary imbalance shapes plants’ relationships with humans, impacting which species are translocated beyond their native distributions.
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页码:1633 / 1644
页数:11
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