2022
DOI: 10.3897/neobiota.76.83320
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Climate change may exacerbate the risk of invasiveness of non-native aquatic plants: the case of the Pannonian and Mediterranean regions of Croatia

Abstract: Non-native aquatic plants are amongst the major threats to freshwater biodiversity and climate change is expected to facilitate their further spread and invasiveness. To date, in Croatia, no complete list of non-native extant and horizon aquatic plants has been compiled nor has a risk screening been performed. To address this knowledge gap, 10 extant and 14 horizon aquatic plant species were screened for their risk of invasiveness in the Pannonian and Mediterranean regions of Croatia under current and predicte… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Unfortunately, with ongoing global warming, more and more invasive exotic weeds are capable to establish and naturalize in areas where they were not able to survive previously (Hobbs 2000;Nobis et al 2009). Among these climate change winners are also some weedy CPs, e.g., Utricularia gibba, which was not hardy in many European climates, but which was recently found to survive and become an invasive species at very high risk in some countries due to global warming (Piria et al 2022).…”
Section: False Argument 2: "Now That the Plants Have Already Been Dug...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unfortunately, with ongoing global warming, more and more invasive exotic weeds are capable to establish and naturalize in areas where they were not able to survive previously (Hobbs 2000;Nobis et al 2009). Among these climate change winners are also some weedy CPs, e.g., Utricularia gibba, which was not hardy in many European climates, but which was recently found to survive and become an invasive species at very high risk in some countries due to global warming (Piria et al 2022).…”
Section: False Argument 2: "Now That the Plants Have Already Been Dug...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…in Croatia was published by Rimac et al [ 22 ] updated by Vuković et al [ 23 ], who presented the results of extensive mapping, showing a large number of localities spread across a much wider area than first reported. Finally, Piria et al [ 24 ] classified E. nuttallii as very high risk and E. canadensis as high risk in terms of their invasiveness under current climate conditions in the Pannonian and Mediterranean regions of Croatia, as determined using risk-screening tools.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%