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Biological invasions are a population‐level rather than a species‐level phenomenon

Biological invasions are a population‐level rather than a species‐level phenomenon
Biological invasions are a population‐level rather than a species‐level phenomenon
Biological invasions pose a rapidly expanding threat to the persistence, functioning and service provisioning of ecosystems globally, and to socio-economic interests. The stages of successful invasions are driven by the same mechanism that underlies adaptive changes across species in general—via natural selection on intraspecific variation in traits that influence survival and reproductive performance (i.e., fitness). Surprisingly, however, the rapid progress in the field of invasion science has resulted in a predominance of species-level approaches (such as deny lists), often irrespective of natural selection theory, local adaptation and other population-level processes that govern successful invasions. To address these issues, we analyse non-native species dynamics at the population level by employing a database of European freshwater macroinvertebrate time series, to investigate spreading speed, abundance dynamics and impact assessments among populations. Our findings reveal substantial variability in spreading speed and abundance trends within and between macroinvertebrate species across biogeographic regions, indicating that levels of invasiveness and impact differ markedly. Discrepancies and inconsistencies among species-level risk screenings and real population-level data were also identified, highlighting the inherent challenges in accurately assessing population-level effects through species-level assessments. In recognition of the importance of population-level assessments, we urge a shift in invasive species management frameworks, which should account for the dynamics of different populations and their environmental context. Adopting an adaptive, region-specific and population-focused approach is imperative, considering the diverse ecological contexts and varying degrees of susceptibility. Such an approach could improve and refine risk assessments while promoting mechanistic understandings of risks and impacts, thereby enabling the development of more effective conservation and management strategies.
Europe, freshwater macroinvertebrates, long-term trends, non-native species, population spread, population-level dynamics, risk assessments
1354-1013
Haubrock, Phillip J.
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Soto, Ismael
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Ahmed, Danish A.
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Ansari, Ali R.
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Kurtul, Irmak
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Macêdo, Rafael L.
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Lázaro‐Lobo, Adrián
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Toutain, Mathieu
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Guareschi, Simone
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Dominguez Almela, Victoria
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Emiroğlu, Özgür
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Mammola, Stefano
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De Santis, Vanessa
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Kourantidou, Melina
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Pincheira‐Donoso, Daniel
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Britton, J. Robert
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Kouba, Antonín
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Dolan, Ellen J.
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Kirichenko, Natalia I.
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García‐Berthou, Emili
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Renault, David
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Fernandez, Romina D.
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Yapıcı, Sercan
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Giannetto, Daniela
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Nuñez, Martin A.
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Hudgins, Emma J.
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Pergl, Jan
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Milardi, Marco
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Musolin, Dmitrii L.
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Cuthbert, Ross N.
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Haubrock, Phillip J.
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Soto, Ismael
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Ahmed, Danish A.
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Kurtul, Irmak
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Macêdo, Rafael L.
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Lázaro‐Lobo, Adrián
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Toutain, Mathieu
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Parker, Ben
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Guareschi, Simone
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Cano‐Barbacil, Carlos
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Mammola, Stefano
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De Santis, Vanessa
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Kourantidou, Melina
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Pincheira‐Donoso, Daniel
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Dolan, Ellen J.
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Kirichenko, Natalia I.
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Renault, David
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Fernandez, Romina D.
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Giannetto, Daniela
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Nuñez, Martin A.
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Hudgins, Emma J.
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Pergl, Jan
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Milardi, Marco
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Musolin, Dmitrii L.
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Cuthbert, Ross N.
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Haubrock, Phillip J., Soto, Ismael, Ahmed, Danish A., Ansari, Ali R., Tarkan, Ali Serhan, Kurtul, Irmak, Macêdo, Rafael L., Lázaro‐Lobo, Adrián, Toutain, Mathieu, Parker, Ben, Błońska, Dagmara, Guareschi, Simone, Cano‐Barbacil, Carlos, Dominguez Almela, Victoria, Andreou, Demetra, Moyano, Jaime, Akalın, Sencer, Kaya, Cüneyt, Bayçelebi, Esra, Yoğurtçuoğlu, Baran, Briski, Elizabeta, Aksu, Sadi, Emiroğlu, Özgür, Mammola, Stefano, De Santis, Vanessa, Kourantidou, Melina, Pincheira‐Donoso, Daniel, Britton, J. Robert, Kouba, Antonín, Dolan, Ellen J., Kirichenko, Natalia I., García‐Berthou, Emili, Renault, David, Fernandez, Romina D., Yapıcı, Sercan, Giannetto, Daniela, Nuñez, Martin A., Hudgins, Emma J., Pergl, Jan, Milardi, Marco, Musolin, Dmitrii L. and Cuthbert, Ross N. (2024) Biological invasions are a population‐level rather than a species‐level phenomenon. Global Change Biology, 30 (5), [e17312]. (doi:10.1111/gcb.17312).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Biological invasions pose a rapidly expanding threat to the persistence, functioning and service provisioning of ecosystems globally, and to socio-economic interests. The stages of successful invasions are driven by the same mechanism that underlies adaptive changes across species in general—via natural selection on intraspecific variation in traits that influence survival and reproductive performance (i.e., fitness). Surprisingly, however, the rapid progress in the field of invasion science has resulted in a predominance of species-level approaches (such as deny lists), often irrespective of natural selection theory, local adaptation and other population-level processes that govern successful invasions. To address these issues, we analyse non-native species dynamics at the population level by employing a database of European freshwater macroinvertebrate time series, to investigate spreading speed, abundance dynamics and impact assessments among populations. Our findings reveal substantial variability in spreading speed and abundance trends within and between macroinvertebrate species across biogeographic regions, indicating that levels of invasiveness and impact differ markedly. Discrepancies and inconsistencies among species-level risk screenings and real population-level data were also identified, highlighting the inherent challenges in accurately assessing population-level effects through species-level assessments. In recognition of the importance of population-level assessments, we urge a shift in invasive species management frameworks, which should account for the dynamics of different populations and their environmental context. Adopting an adaptive, region-specific and population-focused approach is imperative, considering the diverse ecological contexts and varying degrees of susceptibility. Such an approach could improve and refine risk assessments while promoting mechanistic understandings of risks and impacts, thereby enabling the development of more effective conservation and management strategies.

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Global Change Biology - 2024 - Haubrock - Biological invasions are a population‐level rather than a species‐level - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 May 2024
Published date: 12 May 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: Europe, freshwater macroinvertebrates, long-term trends, non-native species, population spread, population-level dynamics, risk assessments

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490260
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490260
ISSN: 1354-1013
PURE UUID: fee9267e-0dc6-4b4c-9294-c293b779985f
ORCID for Victoria Dominguez Almela: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4877-5967

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 May 2024 16:30
Last modified: 20 Jun 2024 02:00

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Contributors

Author: Phillip J. Haubrock
Author: Ismael Soto
Author: Danish A. Ahmed
Author: Ali R. Ansari
Author: Ali Serhan Tarkan
Author: Irmak Kurtul
Author: Rafael L. Macêdo
Author: Adrián Lázaro‐Lobo
Author: Mathieu Toutain
Author: Ben Parker
Author: Dagmara Błońska
Author: Simone Guareschi
Author: Carlos Cano‐Barbacil
Author: Demetra Andreou
Author: Jaime Moyano
Author: Sencer Akalın
Author: Cüneyt Kaya
Author: Esra Bayçelebi
Author: Baran Yoğurtçuoğlu
Author: Elizabeta Briski
Author: Sadi Aksu
Author: Özgür Emiroğlu
Author: Stefano Mammola
Author: Vanessa De Santis
Author: Melina Kourantidou
Author: Daniel Pincheira‐Donoso
Author: J. Robert Britton
Author: Antonín Kouba
Author: Ellen J. Dolan
Author: Natalia I. Kirichenko
Author: Emili García‐Berthou
Author: David Renault
Author: Romina D. Fernandez
Author: Sercan Yapıcı
Author: Daniela Giannetto
Author: Martin A. Nuñez
Author: Emma J. Hudgins
Author: Jan Pergl
Author: Marco Milardi
Author: Dmitrii L. Musolin
Author: Ross N. Cuthbert

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