2023
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-023-03075-7
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Plant migration due to winter climate change: range expansion of tropical invasive plants in response to warming winters

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Future climate change might weaken the filtering effect of freezing (i.e., decreased mortality due to the freezing of body fluids) [64]. Additionally, winter temperature has been observed to be one of the key factors affecting the life history of our target species [37,[65][66][67][68]. For example, the phenotype of this pest insect can be altered by exposure to low temperatures in winter [69].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Future climate change might weaken the filtering effect of freezing (i.e., decreased mortality due to the freezing of body fluids) [64]. Additionally, winter temperature has been observed to be one of the key factors affecting the life history of our target species [37,[65][66][67][68]. For example, the phenotype of this pest insect can be altered by exposure to low temperatures in winter [69].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given warming climatic temperatures and projected increases in extreme weather events (Jay et al 2018; National Academy of Sciences 2020) that can disrupt native vegetation and facilitate invasion (Bradley et al, 2010a;2010b), risk assessments should incorporate climate projections and stochastic events into their processes. In many cases in the US, plant species are already moving northward as temperatures shift, and invasive species will be no different (Hellman et al 2008;Pyke et al 2008;Wang et al 2022;Osland et al 2023). As such, quantitative risk assessments will likely increase in use as they are nimbler and more reactive to recent changes and can be modified to incorporate landscape-and local-level climatic data to predict potential range shifts of non-native species.…”
Section: Barriers To the Development And Implementation Of Risk Asses...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the tropics, climate-induced range shifts will likely result in biotic attrition and range gaps in the lowlands, as no source pool exists for the warmer conditions emerging there (Colwell et al, 2008). Warming conditions additionally result in range changes across the tropics, with small changes in temperature extremes resulting in shifts towards and across tropic margins-as well as inland from coastal areas, likely with particular importance for fast-dispersing invasive species (Osland et al, 2023).…”
Section: What Drive S Novelt Y ?mentioning
confidence: 99%