Abstract
Human introduction of species around the world is not exhaustive.
Comparing characteristics of non-native species that have been
introduced with characteristics of non-native species that could be
introduced can reveal biases in which species were introduced in the
past, and can highlight future threats. We test for introduction biases
in non-native trees introduced to Australia using a dataset of 57,958
tree species known globally. We found that: (1) non-native species were
selectively introduced, and do not form a random subset of all
non-native species, though (2) they do represent the functional
trait-space occupied by tree species globally; (3) trees naturalised in
numerous countries and introduced for more uses are more likely to be
introduced in Australia; and (4) introduction debt can indicate
characteristics of potential future non-native introductions. For
Australia, tree species from the tropics and global south pose an
especially high future invasion risk.