1. Niche shift in invasive species: is it a case of "home away from home" or finding a "new home"?
- Author
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N.A., Aravind, Shaanker, Maanya Uma, Bhat H. N., Poorna, Charles, Bipin, Shaanker R., Uma, Shah, Manzoor A., and G, Ravikanth
- Subjects
INTRODUCED species ,LANTANA camara ,NATIVE Americans ,ECOLOGICAL niche ,BIOLOGICAL laboratories - Abstract
In recent years, there has been a rather acrimonious debate on matters concerning the biology of invasive species, some as fundamental as the definition and what constitutes an invasive species. However, an abiding commonality of all invasive species is the fact that they have all moved away from their native ranges to newer and often non-native ranges. In plants, Lantana camara has shifted from its native South American range distribution to most other parts of the world. In animals, the African giant snail has dispersed from Africa to most parts of Asia. What do such niche shifts signify about the nature and quality of the habitats to which the invasive species have moved? In this paper, using the classical niche paradigm, we analyse if niche shifts of thirty-three of the world's top invasive species constitute just moving from one habitat to another similar habitat somewhere on the earth (home away from home) or that they have moved to totally new habitats (different from their native home). Surprisingly, our results show that for 90% of the world's top invasive species, movements have been largely restricted to homes away from home, rather than into alien homes. This clearly indicates the potential inertia that species might face in moving out of their fundamental niche. We discuss these results in the context of the overall debate on invasion biology and how niche conservatism may have played a role in dampening the rates of invasion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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