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Predicting the distribution of the invasive alien Heracleum mantegazzianum at two different spatial scales
Authors:Charlotte Nielsen   Per Hartvig   Johannes Kollmann
Affiliation:Department of Ecology, University of Copenhagen, Rolighedsvej 21, 1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark,;Botanical Museum, University of Copenhagen, Gothersgade 130, 1123 Copenhagen K, Denmark
Abstract:Modelling the distribution of invasive alien species is widely used for predicting future dispersal, response to climate change, and effects of management, but little information is available on the scale dependence of spatial models. This study is focused on Heracleum mantegazzianum , a problematic invasive plant in central and north-western Europe. The main objective was to model the current distribution of this species at national (43,000 km2) and regional scale (4900 km2) using autologistic regression with a Danish data set. Presence–absence data were used in a grid system with 5 × 5 km2 or 2 × 2 km2 as basic units. To avoid misleading presence–absence models and unreliable probability values due to unbalanced data, the prevalence was used as cut-off value, and a favourability function was applied to the model predictions. The national model showed a widespread distribution of H. mantegazzianum with highest habitat suitability in the eastern and northern parts of the country where human population density is high, winters more severe and/or loamy soils more common. At a regional scale the distribution of H. mantegazzianum is associated with alluvial sand cover, high human population density, spring precipitation, and presence of the species in neighbour grid units. The observed widespread national distribution is likely the result of anthropogenic spread of this ornamental plant, while the locally clumped distribution suggests that H. mantegazzianum naturally spreads mainly over short distances. The current distribution in Denmark resembles an intermediate invasion stage where long-distance dispersal is less important, while spread from suitable neighbour habitats is significant. The study demonstrates that the favourability function leads to improved mapping standards for invasive species.
Keywords:Biological invasions    dispersal limitation    favourability function    Heracleum mantegazzianum    logistic regression    predictive mapping    spatial distribution
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