The Global Distribution and Drivers of Alien Bird Species Richness
2800 Neuroscience
0106 biological sciences
570
Internationality
Time Factors
1300 Biochemistry
QH301-705.5
Gross Domestic Product
590
Genetics and Molecular Biology
01 natural sciences
Birds
1100 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Species Specificity
Animals
14. Life underwater
Biological invasions
Biology (General)
580
General Immunology and Microbiology
General Neuroscience
2400 Immunology and Microbiology
Biodiversity
15. Life on land
General Biochemistry
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Introduced Species
Research Article
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pbio.2000942
Publication Date:
2017-01-12T13:29:39Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
Alien species are a major component of human-induced environmental change. Variation in the numbers of alien species found in different areas is likely to depend on a combination of anthropogenic and environmental factors, with anthropogenic factors affecting the number of species introduced to new locations, and when, and environmental factors influencing how many species are able to persist there. However, global spatial and temporal variation in the drivers of alien introduction and species richness remain poorly understood. Here, we analyse an extensive new database of alien birds to explore what determines the global distribution of alien species richness for an entire taxonomic class. We demonstrate that the locations of origin and introduction of alien birds, and their identities, were initially driven largely by European (mainly British) colonialism. However, recent introductions are a wider phenomenon, involving more species and countries, and driven in part by increasing economic activity. We find that, globally, alien bird species richness is currently highest at midlatitudes and is strongly determined by anthropogenic effects, most notably the number of species introduced (i.e., "colonisation pressure"). Nevertheless, environmental drivers are also important, with native and alien species richness being strongly and consistently positively associated. Our results demonstrate that colonisation pressure is key to understanding alien species richness, show that areas of high native species richness are not resistant to colonisation by alien species at the global scale, and emphasise the likely ongoing threats to global environments from introductions of species.
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