4.4 Article

The rise and fall of an alien: why the successful colonizer Littorina saxatilis failed to invade the Mediterranean Sea

Journal

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Volume 24, Issue 10, Pages 3169-3187

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-022-02838-y

Keywords

Alien species; Ecological niche modelling; Evolutionary ecology; Failed colonization; Intertidal model; Mediterranean Sea

Funding

  1. University of Gothenburg Centre for Marine Evolutionary Biology
  2. MIUR PRIN [201794ZXTL]

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Understanding the factors that determine the success or failure of biological invasions is crucial. This study used Ecological Niche Modelling to investigate the habitat suitability of Littorina saxatilis in Europe and found that environmental constraints and biogeography play important roles in its distribution. The results suggest that abiotic factors and local ecological features are key in determining the success of invasion.
Understanding what determines range expansion or extinction is crucial to predict the success of biological invaders. We tackled this longstanding question from an unparalleled perspective using the failed expansions in Littorina saxatilis and investigated its present and past habitat suitability in Europe through Ecological Niche Modelling. This intertidal snail is a typically successful Atlantic colonizer and the earliest confirmed alien species in the Mediterranean Sea, where, however, it failed to thrive despite its high dispersal ability and adaptability. We explored the environmental constraints affecting its biogeography, identified potential glacial refugia in Europe that fuelled its post-glacial colonisations and tested whether the current gaps in its distribution are linked to local ecological features. Our results suggested that L. saxatilis is unlikely to be a glacial relict in the Mediterranean basin. Multiple Atlantic glacial refugia occurred in the Last Glacial Maximum, and abiotic environmental features such as salinity and water temperature have influenced the past and current distributions of this snail and limited its invasion of the Mediterranean Sea. The snail showed a significant overlap in geographic space and ecological niche with Carcinus maenas, the Atlantic predator, but distinct from Pachygrapsus marmoratus, the Mediterranean predator, further pointing to Atlantic-like habitat requirements for this species. Abiotic constrains during introduction rather than dispersal abilities have shaped the past and current range of L. saxatilis and help explaining why some invasions have not been successful. Our findings contribute to clarifying the processes constraining or facilitating shifts in species' distributions and biological invasions.

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