Forecasting alien species establishment and source regions: Quantitative assessment of potential ant invasions in Japan
Yazmín Zurápiti, Jamie M. Kass, Benoit Guénard, Evan P. Economo

TL;DR
This paper presents a computational workflow to predict which alien ant species might establish in Japan and where they could come from, helping to guide prevention strategies.
Contribution
A novel workflow combining climate models, source region identification, and invasion risk assessment for predicting alien ant invasions.
Findings
All Japanese prefectures face potential risks of new alien ant establishments, with lower latitudes and archipelagos most vulnerable.
Southern Europe and subtropical Americas are key source regions for potential invasive ants, not Asia.
The United States is predicted to be the most likely source of future ant introductions to Japan based on global trade patterns.
Abstract
Due to the costs and difficulties of mitigating past biological invasions, there is a critical need for improved predictions of establishment risk for alien species and their source regions to guide the deployment of preventive measures. Here, focusing on a global pool of ant species known to be spread by humans, we develop a computational workflow to predict threats for a country or region of interest. Specifically, the workflow (1) predicts which alien species are most likely to be established based on climatic suitability with species distribution models, (2) clusters areas threatened by similar assemblages of alien species, and (3) identifies global regions that can act as important sources for these species. We apply this workflow to estimate which ants with human‐assisted invasion histories around the globe may establish in Japan, an island country with broad climatic and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior · Plant and animal studies · Insect and Pesticide Research
