Invasion risk of the currently cultivated alien flora in Southern Africa
is predicted to decline under climate change
Abstract
Alien species can have massive impacts on native biodiversity and
ecosystem functioning. Assessing which species from currently cultivated
alien floras may escape into the wild and naturalize is hence essential
for ecosystem management and biodiversity conservation. Climate change
has promoted the naturalization of many alien plants in temperate
regions, but whether outcomes are similar in (sub)tropical areas is
insufficiently known. In this study, we used species distribution models
to evaluate the current naturalization risk of 1,527 cultivated alien
plants in 10 countries of Southern Africa and how their invasion risk
might change due to climate change. We assessed changes in climatic
suitability across the different biomes of Southern Africa. Moreover, we
assessed whether climatic suitability for cultivated alien plants varied
with their naturalization status and native origin. The results of our
study indicate that a significant proportion (53.9%) of the species are
projected to lack suitable climatic conditions in Southern Africa, both
currently and in the future. Based on the current climate conditions,
10.0% of Southern Africa is identified as an invasion hotspot (here
defined as the top 10% of grid cells that provide suitable climatic
conditions to the highest numbers of species). This percentage is
expected to decrease slightly to 7.1% under moderate future climate
change and shrink considerably to 2.0% under the worst-case scenario.
This decline in climatic suitability is observed across most native
origins, particularly under the worst-case climate change scenario. Our
findings indicate that climate change is likely to have an opposing
effect on the naturalization of currently cultivated average plants in
(sub)tropical Southern Africa compared to colder regions. Specifically,
the risk of these plants’ naturalizing is expected to decrease due to
the region’s increasingly hot and dry climate, which will be challenging
for the persistence of both native and alien plant species.