Cookies on Environmental Impact

Like most websites we use cookies. This is to ensure that we give you the best experience possible.

 

Continuing to use www.cabi.org  means you agree to our use of cookies. If you would like to, you can learn more about the cookies we use.

Environmental Impact

From climate change to biodiversity loss - documenting human impacts on the environment

>>> Sign up to receive our Environmental Sciences newsletter, book alerts and offers <<<

CABI Book Chapter

Invasive species and global climate change.

Book cover for Invasive species and global climate change.

Description

This book contains 18 chapters addressing topics related to the impact of invasive species, including biosecurity, demographics, species diversity, and food security. It is meant for researchers, upper-level students, and policymakers and provides a factual basis for the underlying science and a discussion of that information with respect to current and future impacts and possible solutions. This ...

Chapter 16 (Page no: 282)

Modeling and managing invasive weeds in a changing climate.

Climate change is altering the distributions and impacts of invasive weeds. Invasive weeds reduce crop yields, threaten agroecosystem biodiversity and stability, and cause additional harm to non-agricultural ecosystems and human health. Minimizing these effects requires a proactive approach. For example, growers, land managers and other stakeholders should be trained in invasive weed identification and management before invasive weeds colonize their land. Anticipatory management of invasive weeds therefore relies on predictions about which areas are vulnerable to invasion. This chapter describes models used to predict the distributions and impacts of invasive weeds under current and future climates. Such models have been developed for invasive weeds in agricultural and non-agricultural ecosystems, in the United States and other world regions. We also summarize trade-offs related to model scale and complexity. Many analyses would be improved by the addition of parameters related to weed biology and habitat characteristics, so modeling should be accompanied by efforts to generate these data inputs. In addition, long-term modeling should acknowledge uncertainties related to weed adaptation and cropping system adaptation under climate change. Despite these outstanding challenges, we conclude that modeling efforts provide reliable and useful insights into the effects of climate change on invasive weeds.

Other chapters from this book

Chapter: 1 (Page no: 1) Introduction. Author(s): Ziska, L. H.
Chapter: 2 (Page no: 9) Communicating the dynamic complexities of climate, ecology and invasive species. Author(s): Ziska, L. H.
Chapter: 3 (Page no: 22) Climate change and plant pathogen invasions. Author(s): Garrett, K. A. Thomas-Sharma, S. Forbes, G. A. Nopsa, J. F. H. Sulá, A. I. P.
Chapter: 4 (Page no: 50) Analysis of invasive insects: links to climate change. Author(s): Gutierrez, A. P. Ponti, L.
Chapter: 5 (Page no: 74) Climate change, plant traits and invasion in natural and agricultural ecosystems. Author(s): Blumenthal, D. M. Kray, J. A.
Chapter: 6 (Page no: 95) Non-native species in Antarctic terrestrial environments: how climate change and increasing human activity are compounding the threat of invasion. Author(s): Hughes, K. A. Convey, P.
Chapter: 7 (Page no: 119) Interactions between climate change and species invasions in the marine realm. Author(s): Sorte, C. J. B. Beshai, R. A. Henry, A. K. Mahanes, S. A. Rangel, R. E. Waite, H. R.
Chapter: 8 (Page no: 141) Ragweed in Eastern Europe. Author(s): Makra, L. Matyasovszky, I. Deák, Á. J.
Chapter: 9 (Page no: 158) Climate change and biological invasions in South Africa. Author(s): Wilgen, N. J. van Faulkner, K. T. Robinson, T. B. South, J. Beckett, H. Janion-Scheepers, C. Measey, J. Midgley, G. F. Richardson, D. M.
Chapter: 10 (Page no: 188) Climate change and 'Alien Species in National Parks': revisited. Author(s): Jarnevich, C. Hogan, T. Sieracki, J. L. Lipsky, C. A. Wullschleger, J.
Chapter: 11 (Page no: 203) Climate change and invasive human pathogens. Author(s): Sorensen, C. Gillespie, B. Ahdoot, S.
Chapter: 12 (Page no: 225) Identifying invasive species in real time: Early Detection and Distribution Mapping System (EDDMapS) and other mapping tools. Author(s): Wallace, R. D. Bargeron, C. T.
Chapter: 13 (Page no: 239) Global identification of invasive species: the CABI Invasive Species Compendium as a resource. Author(s): Diaz-Soltero, H.
Chapter: 14 (Page no: 248) The biogeography of invasive plants - projecting range shifts with climate change. Author(s): Bradley, B. A.
Chapter: 15 (Page no: 260) Assessing and managing the impact of climate change on an invasive weed, yellow starthistle. Author(s): Gutierrez, A. P. Ponti, L.
Chapter: 17 (Page no: 307) Early detection and rapid response: a cost-effective strategy for minimizing the establishment and spread of new and emerging invasive plants by global trade, travel and climate change. Author(s): Westbrooks, R. G. Manning, S. T. Waugh, J. D.
Chapter: 18 (Page no: 327) Adapting to invasions in a changing world: invasive species as an economic resource. Author(s): Barnes, M. A. Deines, A. M. Gentile, R. M. Grieneisen, L. E.

Chapter details

  • Author Affiliation
  • Soil and Crop Sciences Section, School of Integrative Plant Science, CornellUniversity, Ithaca, New York, USA.
  • Year of Publication
  • 2022
  • ISBN
  • 9781800621435
  • Record Number
  • 20230013363