Linking climate change and biological invasions: Ocean warming facilitates nonindigenous species invasions
University of Connecticut · University of California, Davis
Abstract
The spread of exotic species and climate change are among the most serious global environmental threats. Each independently causes considerable ecological damage, yet few data are available to assess whether changing climate might facilitate invasions by favoring introduced over native species. Here, we compare our long-term record of weekly sessile marine invertebrate recruitment with interannual variation in water temperature to assess the likely effect of climate change on the success and spread of introduced species. For the three most abundant introduced species of ascidian (sea squirt), the timing of the initiation of recruitment was strongly negatively correlated with winter water temperature,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.35
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 22
Authors
4- JJJohn J. StachowiczCorresponding
University of Connecticut, University of California, Davis
- JRJeffrey R. Terwin
University of Connecticut, University of California, Davis
- RBRobert B. Whitlatch
University of Connecticut, University of California, Davis
- RWRichard W. Osman
University of Connecticut, University of California, Davis
Topics & keywords
- Climate change
- Ecology
- Biota
- Introduced species
- Dominance (genetics)
- Biology
- Global warming
- Effects of global warming on oceans
- Life below water