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Non-native species expand the trait space of avian communities by filling empty niches along an urbanisation gradient
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  • Fabio Marcolin,
  • Riccardo Alba,
  • Stefano Mammola,
  • Giacomo Assandri,
  • Luca Ilahiane,
  • Diego Rubolini,
  • Luis Reino,
  • Daniel Chamberlain
Fabio Marcolin
Universidade de Lisboa Instituto Superior de Agronomia

Corresponding Author:fabiomarcolin@isa.ulisboa.pt

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Riccardo Alba
University of Turin Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology
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Stefano Mammola
Laboratory for Integrative Biodiversity Research (LIBRe), Finnish Museum of Natural History (LUOMUS), University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
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Giacomo Assandri
University of Eastern Piemonte Amedeo Avogadro Department of Science and Technological Innovation
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Luca Ilahiane
Università degli Studi di Milano Dipartimento di Scienze e Politiche Ambientali
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Diego Rubolini
Università di Milano
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Luis Reino
CIBIO-University of Porto
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Daniel Chamberlain
Universita degli Studi di Torino
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Abstract

Non-native species are one of the greatest threats to biodiversity worldwide, due to their direct and indirect effects on native communities. There are two opposing hypotheses to explain how non-native species successfully establish outside their native range. The first posits that non-native species are closely related to local native species through environmental filtering which selects species with similar traits; the second, that non-native species are distantly related to native species in the area in which they establish due to limiting similarity which minimizes competition. We assessed support for these two hypotheses by characterising the functional trait space of bird communities in Italian cities. We surveyed 220 points in breeding and winter periods along an urbanisation gradient in six cities. We assessed the two opposing hypotheses by calculating functional diversity metrics (Functional Dispersion i.e. quantification of the distribution of functional elements in the niche space, and Contribution i.e. contribution of each species to the niche space) for each community. We then modelled these metrics in relation to the presence/absence of non-native parakeet species along the urbanisation gradient. We found that non-native parakeet species were more likely to establish in the vacant functional niche space of urban bird communities, showing marked dissimilarity to native species in terms of niche space. Our results suggest that limiting similarity is the main mechanism promoting invasions at the local scale. Urban environments offer novel opportunities that are exploited by non-native birds, minimising competition with native species. This insight into niche space processes in urban areas, which can act as centres for expansion of non-native birds into other environments, can be used when implementing management strategies to enhance environmental filtering in these areas, thus reducing the chances of further establishment of non-native species.
14 Oct 2024Submitted to Ecography
16 Oct 2024Submission Checks Completed
16 Oct 2024Assigned to Editor
16 Oct 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
03 Nov 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned