2014
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1206
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Reconstruction of a windborne insect invasion using a particle dispersal model, historical wind data, andBayesian analysis of genetic data

Abstract: Understanding how invasive species establish and spread is vital for developing effective management strategies for invaded areas and identifying new areas where the risk of invasion is highest. We investigated the explanatory power of dispersal histories reconstructed based on local-scale wind data and a regional-scale wind-dispersed particle trajectory model for the invasive seed chalcid wasp Megastigmus schimitscheki (Hymenoptera: Torymidae) in France. The explanatory power was tested by: (1) survival analy… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Our current results show that this topic can be explored using relatively simple methods, but more sophisticated approaches could provide even stronger inference about wind‐driven synchrony. For example, higher resolution wind models could be coupled with models of particle spread (Lander et al., ) to predict detailed dispersal patterns and thus help formulate more precise predictions about the directionality of synchrony.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our current results show that this topic can be explored using relatively simple methods, but more sophisticated approaches could provide even stronger inference about wind‐driven synchrony. For example, higher resolution wind models could be coupled with models of particle spread (Lander et al., ) to predict detailed dispersal patterns and thus help formulate more precise predictions about the directionality of synchrony.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adult western conifer seed bugs ( L. occidentalis ) display impressively active flight capacities that partly allowed this invasive species to spread over Europe within a decade (Rabitsch, ), while chestnut weevils ( C. pellitus and C. venosus ) have very limited abilities for active dispersal flights (Pélisson et al ., ). Highly host‐specialized seed wasps use prevailing winds for long‐distance dispersal in a landscape fragmentation context in which their incapacity to use alternative habitats is a natural barrier to simple diffusion (Jarry et al ., ; Lander et al ., ). The demography of highly mobile seed predators may depend less of the previous seed crops than that of species with low mobility (Hulme & Benkman, ).…”
Section: Insect Adaptations To Spatiotemporal Variability Of Tree Repmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…A joint search in Web of Science with keywords ‘insect’ and ‘long‐distance transport’ produced 90 papers. Many of them include a trajectory analysis of the transport processes (Carlson et al ., ; Westbrook et al ., ; Dantart et al ., ; McLaren et al ., ; Sturtevant et al ., ; Lander et al ., ). Carlson et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Lander et al . () investigated the explanatory power of a regional‐scale wind‐dispersed particle trajectory model for the invasive seed chalcid wasp Megastigmus schimitscheki (Hymenoptera: Torymidae) in France. However, so far, only one paper has dealt with the long‐distance transport of thrips using trajectory calculations (McLaren et al ., ), in which probable trajectories were computed for New Zealand flower thrips ( Thrips obscuratus Crawford) transported to Central Otago in the Spring using wind speed, wind direction and air temperature data collected at several meteorological stations, and then the departure conditions were characterized.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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