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Climate Change Potentially Leads to Habitat Expansion and Increases the Invasion Risk of IHydrocharis/I

Climate change is a crucial factor impacting the geographical distribution of plants and potentially increases the risk of invasion for certain species, especially for aquatic plants dispersed by water flow. Here, we combined six algorithms provided by the biomod2 platform to predict the changes in...

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Published in:Plants (Basel) 2023-12, Vol.12 (24)
Main Authors: Yang, Jiongming, Fu, Zhihao, Xiao, Keyan, Dong, Hongjin, Zhou, Yadong, Zhan, Qinghua
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container_issue 24
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container_title Plants (Basel)
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creator Yang, Jiongming
Fu, Zhihao
Xiao, Keyan
Dong, Hongjin
Zhou, Yadong
Zhan, Qinghua
description Climate change is a crucial factor impacting the geographical distribution of plants and potentially increases the risk of invasion for certain species, especially for aquatic plants dispersed by water flow. Here, we combined six algorithms provided by the biomod2 platform to predict the changes in global climate-suitable areas for five species of Hydrocharis (Hydrocharitaceae) (H. chevalieri, H. dubia, H. laevigata, H. morsus-ranae, and H. spongia) under two current and future carbon emission scenarios. Our results show that H. dubia, H. morsus-ranae, and H. laevigata had a wide range of suitable areas and a high risk of invasion, while H. chevalieri and H. spongia had relatively narrow suitable areas. In the future climate scenario, the species of Hydrocharis may gain a wider habitat area, with Northern Hemisphere species showing a trend of migration to higher latitudes and the change in tropical species being more complex. The high-carbon-emission scenario led to greater changes in the habitat area of Hydrocharis. Therefore, we recommend strengthening the monitoring and reporting of high-risk species and taking effective measures to control the invasion of Hydrocharis species.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/plants12244124
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subjects Biological invasions
Climatic changes
Environmental aspects
title Climate Change Potentially Leads to Habitat Expansion and Increases the Invasion Risk of IHydrocharis/I
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