# Risk Assessment of Alien Woody Plants in China’s National Nature Reserves Under Climate Change

**Authors:** Da-Zhi Wang, Chun-Jing Wang, Fei-Xue Zhang, Hong-Li Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/plants14193006 · 2025-09-28

## TL;DR

This study assesses how climate change will affect the spread of invasive woody plants in China's nature reserves and suggests region-specific management strategies.

## Contribution

The study introduces a spatially explicit framework for managing invasive species under climate change in protected areas.

## Key findings

- Current invasion hotspots are in southern tropical–subtropical national nature reserves.
- 71 AWP species, including Quercus robur and Robinia pseudoacacia, pose consistently high invasion risks.
- Climate change is expected to expand invasion risks northward and westward due to longer growing seasons.

## Abstract

Alien woody plants (AWPs) increasingly threaten biodiversity in China’s national nature reserves, with climate change expected to intensify these risks. We used species distribution modeling (MaxEnt) and spatial prioritization (Zonation) to assess invasion risk for 251 AWP species across 479 national nature reserves under current and future climate scenarios (SSP245 and SSP585). Spatial prioritization revealed current hotspots in southern tropical–subtropical national nature reserves (e.g., Hainan, Fujian, Yunnan provinces), with significant northward and westward expansion projected under warming. A total of 71 species—such as Quercus robur, Salix alba, and Robinia pseudoacacia—pose consistently high risks, while some others (e.g., Ficus benghalensis) may become emerging threats under future conditions. These range shifts are driven by thermal constraint relaxation and longer growing seasons. To mitigate future impacts, we recommend region-specific strategies: containment and seed-source control in southern national nature reserves, and early detection and monitoring in northern and western regions. Our findings provide a spatially explicit framework for climate-informed invasive species management in protected areas.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Quercus robur (taxon 38942), Salix alba (taxon 75704), Robinia pseudoacacia (taxon 35938), Ficus benghalensis (taxon 309271)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Robinia pseudoacacia (black locust, species) [taxon 35938], Salix alba (white willow, species) [taxon 75704], Ficus benghalensis (banyan, species) [taxon 309271], Quercus robur (English oak, species) [taxon 38942]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12526335/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12526335