Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United States

The contiguous United States (CONUS) harbor a significant non-native species diversity. However, spatiotemporal trends of some groups such as terrestrial gastropods (i.e., land snails and slugs) have not been comprehensively considered, and therefore management has been hindered. Her...

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Main Authors: Nicholas S. Gladstone, Trystan A. Bordeau, Christy Leppanen, Michael L. McKinney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2020-06-01
Series:NeoBiota
Online Access:https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/52195/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-3d67b810e2304ed68ecef04eb64dae7f2020-11-25T02:28:51ZengPensoft PublishersNeoBiota1314-24882020-06-015713315210.3897/neobiota.57.5219552195Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United StatesNicholas S. Gladstone0Trystan A. Bordeau1Christy Leppanen2Michael L. McKinney3Auburn UniversityUniversity of TennesseeUniversity of TennesseeThe University of Tennessee The contiguous United States (CONUS) harbor a significant non-native species diversity. However, spatiotemporal trends of some groups such as terrestrial gastropods (i.e., land snails and slugs) have not been comprehensively considered, and therefore management has been hindered. Here, our aims were to 1.) compile a dataset of all non-native terrestrial gastropod species with CONUS occurrence records, 2.) assess overarching spatiotemporal patterns associated with these records, 3.) describe the continental origin of each species, and 4.) compare climatic associations of each species in their indigenous and introduced CONUS ranges. We compiled a georeferenced dataset of 10,097 records for 22 families, 48 genera, and 69 species, with > 70% of records sourced from the citizen science database iNaturalist. The species Cornu aspersum Müller, 1774 was most prevalent with 3,672 records. The majority (> 92%) of records exhibit an indigenous Western European and Mediterranean distribution, with overlap in broad-scale climatic associations between indigenous and CONUS ranges. Records are most dense in urban metropolitan areas, with the highest proportion of records and species richness in the state of California. We show increased prevalence of non-native species through time, largely associated with urbanized areas with high human population density. Moreover, we show strong evidence for a role for analogous climates in dictating geographic fate and pervasiveness between indigenous and CONUS ranges for non-native species. https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/52195/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicholas S. Gladstone
Trystan A. Bordeau
Christy Leppanen
Michael L. McKinney
spellingShingle Nicholas S. Gladstone
Trystan A. Bordeau
Christy Leppanen
Michael L. McKinney
Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United States
NeoBiota
author_facet Nicholas S. Gladstone
Trystan A. Bordeau
Christy Leppanen
Michael L. McKinney
author_sort Nicholas S. Gladstone
title Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United States
title_short Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United States
title_full Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United States
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United States
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous United States
title_sort spatiotemporal patterns of non-native terrestrial gastropods in the contiguous united states
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series NeoBiota
issn 1314-2488
publishDate 2020-06-01
description The contiguous United States (CONUS) harbor a significant non-native species diversity. However, spatiotemporal trends of some groups such as terrestrial gastropods (i.e., land snails and slugs) have not been comprehensively considered, and therefore management has been hindered. Here, our aims were to 1.) compile a dataset of all non-native terrestrial gastropod species with CONUS occurrence records, 2.) assess overarching spatiotemporal patterns associated with these records, 3.) describe the continental origin of each species, and 4.) compare climatic associations of each species in their indigenous and introduced CONUS ranges. We compiled a georeferenced dataset of 10,097 records for 22 families, 48 genera, and 69 species, with > 70% of records sourced from the citizen science database iNaturalist. The species Cornu aspersum Müller, 1774 was most prevalent with 3,672 records. The majority (> 92%) of records exhibit an indigenous Western European and Mediterranean distribution, with overlap in broad-scale climatic associations between indigenous and CONUS ranges. Records are most dense in urban metropolitan areas, with the highest proportion of records and species richness in the state of California. We show increased prevalence of non-native species through time, largely associated with urbanized areas with high human population density. Moreover, we show strong evidence for a role for analogous climates in dictating geographic fate and pervasiveness between indigenous and CONUS ranges for non-native species.
url https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/52195/download/pdf/
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