4.5 Article

DASCO: A workflow to downscale alien species checklists using occurrence records and to re-allocate species distributions across realms

期刊

NEOBIOTA
卷 74, 期 -, 页码 75-91

出版社

PENSOFT PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.3897/neobiota.74.81082

关键词

biological invasion; checklists; coordinates; distribution; downscaling; GBIF; marine ecoregions; neobiota; open science; workflow

资金

  1. 2017-2018 Belmont Forum and BiodivERsA joint call for research proposals, under the BiodivScen ERA-Net COFUND programme
  2. BMBF [16LC1807A]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This article introduces a semi-automated workflow called DASCO, which utilizes occurrence records from GBIF and OBIS to downscale regional checklists. The workflow enables the provision of checklist information at a local scale and allows for re-allocation based on user-defined spatial categorization. It has the potential to assist in evaluating the status and trends of biological invasions.
Information about occurrences of alien species is often provided in so-called checklists, which represents lists of reported alien species in a region. In many cases, available checklists cover whole countries, which is too coarse for many analyses and limits capabilities of assessing status and trends of biological invasions. In-formation about point-wise occurrences is available in large quantities at online facilities such as GBIF and OBIS, which, however, do not provide information about the invasion status of individual populations. To close this gap, we here provide a semi-automated workflow called DASCO to downscale regional checklists using occurrence records obtained from GBIF and OBIS. Within the workflow, coordinate-based occur-rence records for species listed in the provided regional checklists are obtained from GBIF and OBIS, and the status of being an alien population is assigned using the information in the provided checklists. In this way, information in checklists is made available at the local scale, which can then be re-allocated to any other spatial categorisation as provided by the user. In addition, habitats of species are determined to dis-tinguish between marine, brackish, terrestrial, and freshwater species, which allows splitting the provided checklists to the respective realms and ecoregions. By using checklists of global databases, we showcase the usage of the DASCO workflow and revealed > 35 million occurrence records of alien populations in terrestrial and marine regions worldwide, which were back-transformed to terrestrial and marine regions for comparison. DASCO has the potential to be used as a basis for the widely applied species distribution models or assessments of status and trends of biological invasions at large geographic scales. The workflow is implemented in R and in full compliance with the FAIR data principles of open science.

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