Litcius/Paper detail

Distance to native climatic niche margins explains establishment success of alien mammals

Olivier Broennimann, Blaise Petitpierre, Mathieu Chevalier, Manuela González‐Suárez, Jonathan M. Jeschke, Jonathan Rolland, Sarah M. Gray, Sven Bacher, Antoine Guisan

2021Nature Communications60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

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.

Topics & Concepts

NicheEcologyEnvironmental niche modellingEcological nicheAlien speciesRange (aeronautics)Matching (statistics)MammalIntroduced speciesInvasive speciesGeographyClimate changeBiologyHabitatComposite materialMaterials scienceStatisticsMathematicsSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeWildlife Ecology and ConservationAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies