Item


How many and which ant species are being accidentally moved around the world?

Aquest article va ser corregit l’1 de juliol de 2014. La correcció es va publicar a Biology Letters, 2014, vol. 10, núm. 7, p. 20140504

Human transportation facilitates the dispersal of exotic ants, but few studies have quantified the magnitude and geography of these movements. We used several non-parametric indices to estimate the number of species successfully introduced to or established in new regions. We also compared their source biogeographic realms to assess the importance of geographical origin in determining the likelihood of establishment after introduction. Occurrence data on exotic ants derive from studies of three temperate regions. Our results suggest that the numbers of introduced or established ants may be much larger than the numbers so far documented. Ants introduced or established in new regions tend to arrive from the same or neighbouring realms, as would be expected if exotic species tend to match climates and if arrival/establishment is dependent upon higher trade rates from neighbouring countries

V.M. and C.G. received support from MICINN (CGL2010-16451), N.R-P. from MICINN (CSD2008-00040) and R.R.D. from US DOE PER (DE-FG02-08ER64510), NASA Biodiversity (ROSES-NNX09AK22G) and NSF Career (0953390) grants

The Royal Society

Manager: Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia (Espanya)
Author: Miravete, Verònica
Roura i Pascual, Núria
Dunn, Robert R
Gómez López, Crisanto
Abstract: Aquest article va ser corregit l’1 de juliol de 2014. La correcció es va publicar a Biology Letters, 2014, vol. 10, núm. 7, p. 20140504
Human transportation facilitates the dispersal of exotic ants, but few studies have quantified the magnitude and geography of these movements. We used several non-parametric indices to estimate the number of species successfully introduced to or established in new regions. We also compared their source biogeographic realms to assess the importance of geographical origin in determining the likelihood of establishment after introduction. Occurrence data on exotic ants derive from studies of three temperate regions. Our results suggest that the numbers of introduced or established ants may be much larger than the numbers so far documented. Ants introduced or established in new regions tend to arrive from the same or neighbouring realms, as would be expected if exotic species tend to match climates and if arrival/establishment is dependent upon higher trade rates from neighbouring countries
V.M. and C.G. received support from MICINN (CGL2010-16451), N.R-P. from MICINN (CSD2008-00040) and R.R.D. from US DOE PER (DE-FG02-08ER64510), NASA Biodiversity (ROSES-NNX09AK22G) and NSF Career (0953390) grants
Document access: http://hdl.handle.net/2072/299096
Language: eng
Publisher: The Royal Society
Rights: Tots els drets reservats
Subject: Invasions biològiques
Biological invasions
Animals invasors
Introduced organisms
Espècies introduïdes
Title: How many and which ant species are being accidentally moved around the world?
Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Repository: Recercat

Subjects

Authors