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Review paper on assessing of niche shfits in introduced species

Congratulations to Olivia who published her second first-author paper with Cleo, entitled ‘Climatic niche shifts in introduced species’ in Current Biology!

Predictions of future biological invasions often rely on the assumption that introduced species establish only under climatic conditions similar to those in their native range. To date, 135 studies have tested this assumption of ‘niche conservatism’, yielding contradictory results. Here we revisit this literature, consider the evidence for niche shifts, critically assess the methods used, and discuss the authors’ interpretations of niche shifts. We find that the true frequency of niche shifts remains unknown because of diverging interpretations of similar metrics, conceptual issues biasing conclusions towards niche conservatism, and the use of climatic data that may not be biologically meaningful. We argue that these issues could be largely addressed by focussing on trends or relative degrees of niche change instead of dichotomous classifications (shift versus no shift), consistently and transparently including non-analogous climates, and conducting experimental studies on mismatches between macroclimates and microclimates experienced by the study organism. Furthermore, an observed niche shift may result either from species filling a greater part of their fundamental niche during the invasion (a ‘realised niche shift’) or from rapid evolution of traits adapting species to novel climates in the introduced range (a ‘fundamental niche shift’). Currently, there is no conclusive evidence distinguishing between these potential mechanisms of niche shifts. We outline how these questions may be addressed by combining computational analyses and experimental evidence.

see: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2021.08.035 for the full paper!

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Paper on two invasion waves over the last century in insects and plants

Congratulations to Aymeric Bonnamour for his first paper in his PhD!!! It was published today in Ecology Letters. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ele.13863#

Insect and plant invasions follow two waves of globalisation

Globalisation has facilitated the spread of alien species, and some of them have significant impacts on biodiversity and human societies. It is commonly thought that biological invasions have accelerated continuously over the last centuries, following increasing global trade. However, the world experienced two distinct waves of globalisation (~1820–1914, 1960-present), and it remains unclear whether these two waves have influenced invasion dynamics of many species. To test this, we built a statistical model that accounted for temporal variations in sampling effort. We found that insect and plant invasion rates did not continuously increase over the past centuries but greatly fluctuated following the two globalisation waves. Our findings challenge the idea of a continuous acceleration of alien species introductions and highlight the association between temporal variations in trade openness and biological invasion dynamics. More generally, this emphasises the urgency of better understanding the subtleties of socio-economic drivers to improve predictions of future invasions.

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On the Radio!

 Cleo has participated in a radio show (2nd August 8h30 – 11h « Le grand air ») to discuss her research on on RTS

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New paper on bridgehead effects in Diversity and Distributions

 Bridgehead effects distort global flows of alien species

Bertelsmeier, C., & Ollier, S. (2021). Diversity and Distributions, ddi.13388. https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.13388

A major goal of invasion biology is to understand global species flows between donor and recipient regions. Our current view of such flows assumes that species are moved directly from their native to their introduced range. However, if introduced populations serve as bridgehead populations that generate additional introductions, tracing intercontinental flows between donor and recipient regions misrepresents the introduction history. Here, we show that such bridgehead effects distort our view of global species flows.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ddi.13388

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Paper published about “Invasion Disharmony”

Invasion disharmony in the global biogeography of native and non‐native beetle species

Liebhold, A. M., Turner, R. M., Blake, R. E., Bertelsmeier, C., Brockerhoff, E. G., Nahrung, H. F., Pureswaran, D. S., Roques, A., Seebens, H., & Yamanaka, T. (2021).  Diversity and Distributions, ddi.13381. https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.13381

The concept of “island disharmony” has been widely applied to describe the systematic over- and under-representation of taxa on islands compared to mainland regions. Here, we explore an extension of that concept to biological invasions. We compare biogeographical patterns in native and non-native beetle (Coleoptera) assemblages from around the world to test whether beetle invasions represent a random sample of species or whether some families are more prone to invade than others.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ddi.13381