Five Potential Consequences of Climate Change for Invasive Species
University of Notre Dame · University of New Hampshire · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Scientific and societal unknowns make it difficult to predict how global environmental changes such as climate change and biological invasions will affect ecological systems. In the long term, these changes may have interacting effects and compound the uncertainty associated with each individual driver. Nonetheless, invasive species are likely to respond in ways that should be qualitatively predictable, and some of these responses will be distinct from those of native counterparts. We used the stages of invasion known as the "invasion pathway" to identify 5 nonexclusive consequences of climate change for invasive species: (1) altered transport and introduction mechanisms, (2) establishment of new invasive…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 53.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Invasive species
- Climate change
- Ecology
- Introduced species
- Biology
- Environmental resource management
- Environmental science
- Climate action