Invasion risk of the currently cultivated alien flora in Southern Africa is predicted to decline under climate change
Data files
Feb 26, 2024 version files 164.76 KB
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Omer__et_all_Ecograohy_2024.xlsx
161.64 KB
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README.md
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Abstract
Alien species can have massive impacts on native biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, and human livelihoods. Assessing which species from currently cultivated alien floras may escape into the wild and naturalize is essential for efficient and proactive ecosystem management and biodiversity conservation. Climate change has already promoted the naturalization of many alien plants in temperate regions, but whether it is similar in (sub)tropical areas is insufficiently known. In this study, we used species distribution models for 1,527 cultivated alien plants to evaluate current and future invasion risks across different biomes and 10 countries in southern Africa. Our results confirm that the area of suitable climate is a strong predictor of naturalization success among the cultivated alien flora. In contrast to previous findings from temperate regions, however, climatic suitability is generally predicted to decrease for potential aliens across our (sub)tropical study region. While increasingly hotter and drier conditions are likely to drive declines in suitability for potential aliens across most biomes of southern Africa, in some the number of potential invaders is predicted to increase under moderate climate change scenarios (e.g., in dry broadleaf forests and flooded grasslands). We found that climatic suitability is expected to decline less for aliens originating from continents with the tropical biome or from the Southern Hemisphere. In addition, we found that the climatically suitable area will decline less for aliens that have already naturalized in the region. While the number of potential invaders may decrease across southern Africa under future climate change, our results suggest that already naturalized aliens will continue to threaten native species and ecosystems.
README
This readme.txt file was generated on 2024-02-12 by Ali Omer
GENERAL INFORMATION
Title of Dataset: Caltivted alien flora of Southern Africa
Author Information
A. Principal Investigator Contact Information
Name: Ali Omer
Institution: Division of BioInvasions, Global Change & Macroecology, Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research, University of Vienna
Address: Rennweg 14, Vienna 1030, Austria
Email: ali.haroon.ali.omer@univie.ac.atDate of data collection: 2019.03.01-2020.11.01.
Geographic location of data collection: Konstanz, Germany.
Information about funding sources that supported the collection of the data:
this data was funded through the German Research Foundation DFG (grants 264740629 and 432253815). and FWF-DFG for funding (grant I-5825 – B)
SHARING/ACCESS INFORMATION
Links to publications that cite or use the data: This data was used to produce a study that is accepted for publication in Ecography (10.1111/ecog.07010).
Recommended citation for this dataset:
Omer, A. et al. 2024. Invasion risk of the currently cultivated alien flora in Southern Africa is predicted to decline under climate change. – Dryad Digital Repository,
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.c59zw3rg2.
DATA & FILE OVERVIEW
- File List:
- Cultivated_alien_taxa_data, list of cultivated alien taxa of Southern Africa and associated data on geographic origins, growth form, climatic suitability and naturalization status,
METHODOLOGICAL INFORMATION
- Description of methods used for collection/generation of data: The list of cultivated species and all the associated datasets were extracted from different data sources (for more details see https://doi.org/10.1111/ecog.07010)
- Methods for processing the data: Theis data has been processed with speceis distributiom models (SDMs), series randomization tests and generalized linear models to produce a manuscript accepted for publication in Ecography.
DATA-SPECIFIC INFORMATION FOR: [Cultivated alien taxa data]
Number of variables: 25
Number of cases/rows: 1,527
Variable List:
- TPL names, Accepted taxonomic name according to The Plant List version 1.1 (http://www.theplantlist.org)
- Family, Accepted family names of the cultivated flora according to The Plant List version 1.1 (http://www.theplantlist.org).
- GloNAF naturalization status, Naturalization status in Southern Africa (yes=1, no=0) according to the GloNAF database, 0-1
- Variables from 4 to 18 are names of the continents of origins and the growth forms of each species
- Current climatic suitability, number of suitabile grid cells under current climatic condition
- SSP1_CanESM5 climatic suitability, SSP5_CanESM5 climatic suitability, SSP1_CNRM_ESN climatic suitability, SP5_CNRM_ESN climatic suitability, SSP1_MIROC6 climatic suitability, SSP5_MIROC6 climatic suitability, number of suitabile grid cells under different future climatic scenarios and global circulation models (GCMs)
- Missing data codes: NA
<list code/symbol and definition>
0 = No
1 = yes