Environmental niche and functional role similarity between invasive and native palms in the Atlantic Forest

Usamos informações espaciais e ecológicas para caracterizar o nicho ambiental e o papel funcional de duas espécies de palmeiras, uma nativa e outra invasora, avaliando sua sobreposição e predizendo as áreas potenciais na Mata Atlântica para o cenários climático presente e sob efeito das mudanças climáticas

Resumo

Invasive species can significantly affect native species when their niches are similar. Ecological and morphological similarities between the invasive Australian palm, Archontophoenix cunninghamiana, and the native palm from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, Euterpe edulis, suggest that they have similar environmental requirements and functional roles (i.e., the function a species performs in an ecosystem). This similarity raises concerns about how the invasive palm could impact the native species in the present and future. We used spatial (species occurrences) and ecological information (frugivory events) to characterize the environmental niche and functional role of the two palms and assess their overlap. In addition, we predicted the potential area of occurrence of each palm within the Brazilian Atlantic Forest under current and future climate conditions. We estimated the environmental conditions used by the invasive plant based on its native distribution only, and based on all areas where the species is able to establish across the globe. We found that the environmental niches of the two palm species overlap up to 39%, which corresponds to 50% of the current geographic distribution of E. edulis in the Atlantic Forest. In the areas where the two species potentially co-occur, the impact of the invasive species on the native should be influenced by the invasive species interactions with frugivores. We found that the frugivory functional role of the two palms was similar (84% overlap) which suggest that A. cunninghamiana might disrupt the seed dispersal of the native palm. However, co-occurrence between the palms may decline with future climate change, as the potentially environmental suitable area for the invasive palm is predicted to decline by 10% to 55%. Evaluating the similarity in both the environmental niche, of the native and global extent, and the functional role of native and invasive plants provides a detailed understanding of the potential impact of invasive species on native species now and in the future.

Citação

@article{bello_etal_2021,
	title = {Environmental niche and functional role similarity between invasive and native palms in the {Atlantic} {Forest}},
	volume = {23},
	issn = {1387-3547, 1573-1464},
	url = {https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10530-020-02400-8},
	doi = {10.1007/s10530-020-02400-8},
	abstract = {},
	language = {en},
	number = {3},
	urldate = {2022-06-08},
	journal = {Biological Invasions},
	author = {Bello, Carolina and Cintra, Ana Laura P. and Barreto, Elisa and Vancine, Maurício Humberto and Sobral-Souza, Thadeu and Graham, Catherine H. and Galetti, Mauro},
	month = mar,
	year = {2021},
	pages = {741--754},
}
Posted on:
March 1, 2020
Length:
2 minute read, 396 words
Categories:
Artigo
Tags:
Palmeiras Modelagem de Nicho Ecológico Mudança climática Mata Atlântica
See Also:
Estrutura da paisagem como preditor da diversidade taxonômica e funcional de anfíbios na Mata Atlântica
The Atlantic Forest of South America: spatiotemporal dynamics of vegetation and implications for conservation
The Protected Areas network may be insufficient to protect bird diversity in a fragmented tropical hotspot under different climate scenarios