4.8 Article

The global spread and invasion capacities of alien ants

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages 566-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.12.020

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This study comprehensively maps the human-mediated spread of 520 alien ant species across 525 regions globally by analyzing over 146,000 occurrence records. The study reveals that alien species with different invasion capacities have different sources and sinks globally. Additionally, border interceptions worldwide miss two-thirds of alien species with naturalization capacity. This research documents the vast spread of alien ants globally and suggests more targeted biosecurity responses.
Many alien species are neither cultivated nor traded but spread unintentionally, and their global movements, capacities to invade ecosystems, and susceptibility to detection by biosecurity measures are poorly known.1-4 We addressed these key knowledge gaps for ants, a ubiquitous group of stowaway and contam-inant organisms that include some of the world's most damaging invasive species.5-10 We assembled a data -set of over 146,000 occurrence records to comprehensively map the human-mediated spread of 520 alien ant species across 525 regions globally. From descriptions of the environments in which species were collected within individual regions-such as in imported cargoes, buildings, and outdoor settings-we determined whether different barriers to invasion had been overcome11 and classified alien ant species under three levels of invasion capacity corresponding to increasing biosecurity threat. We found that alien species of different invasion capacities had different sources and sinks globally. For instance, although the diversity of indoor -confined species peaked in the Palearctic realm, that of species able to establish outdoors peaked in the Nearctic and Oceanian realms, and these mainly originated from the Neotropical and Oriental realms. We also found that border interceptions worldwide missed two-thirds of alien species with naturalization capac-ity, many associated with litter and soil. Our study documents the vast spread of alien ants globally while highlighting avenues for more targeted biosecurity responses, such as prioritizing the screening of imports from regions that are diversity hotspots for species of high invasion capacity and improving the detection of cryptic alien invertebrates dwelling in substrates.

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