Publications by authors named "Guillaume Latombe"

While biological invasions continue to threaten biodiversity, most of current assessments focus on the sole exposure to invasive alien species (IAS), without considering native species' response to the threat. Here, we address this gap by assessing vertebrates' vulnerability to biological invasions, combining measures of both (i) exposure to 304 identified IAS and (ii) realized sensitivity of 1600 native vertebrates to this threat. We used the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species to identify species threatened by IAS, their distribution, and the species' range characteristics of their associated IAS.

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  • Many plant traits change with environmental factors, which indicates how plants adapt and how ecosystems might be affected by climate change.
  • The study uses Bayesian modeling to analyze the relationships between plant traits and environmental conditions for both native and non-native plants in Central Europe, assessing how these traits might shift by the year 2100.
  • The findings suggest that non-native species may experience greater trait changes compared to natives, with certain traits like height and leaf area expected to decline or increase differently based on whether the plants are woody or herbaceous.
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Unlabelled: The extent and impacts of biological invasions on biodiversity are largely shaped by an array of socio-economic and environmental factors, which exhibit high variation among countries. Yet, a global analysis of how these factors vary across countries is currently lacking. Here, we investigate how five broad, country-specific socio-economic and environmental indices (Governance, Trade, Environmental Performance, Lifestyle and Education, Innovation) explain country-level (1) established alien species (EAS) richness of eight taxonomic groups, and (2) proactive or reactive capacity to prevent and manage biological invasions and their impacts.

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  • Community science fosters public engagement in research, enhancing education and awareness around important issues like biodiversity, particularly concerning alien species.
  • While beneficial, uncertainties in study design, data collection, and communication can hinder project success, impacting the reliability of findings.
  • The text outlines methods to reduce these uncertainties and provides practical recommendations to improve community science outcomes, critical for monitoring novel alien species effectively.
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  • The spread of alien plant species around the world significantly increased during European colonialism, as empires transported both intentionally and unintentionally various species to their territories.
  • The research indicates that regions formerly occupied by the same European empire (British, Spanish, Portuguese, and Dutch) show a surprising level of similarity in their alien plant species, influenced by the duration of occupation.
  • The study also shows that regions of greater economic or strategic importance during colonial times tend to have more similar alien floras, highlighting the lasting influence of European colonial history on today's global plant distribution.
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  • The paper introduces GIRAE (Generalised Impact = Range size × Abundance × per-unit Effect) as a method to estimate the total impact of alien species by examining their range, how abundant they are, and their specific effects on the environment.
  • Two approaches to apply GIRAE are proposed: the species-specific method which focuses on individual species at various sites, and the multi-species method which aggregates data across multiple species, making it easier to apply but less precise than the first.
  • Using South African data on plant invasion management costs, the study reveals significant variations in expenditure per area for different species, emphasizing the practical application of GIRAE in managing biological invasions.
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Community and invasion ecology have mostly grown independently. There is substantial overlap in the processes captured by different models in the two fields, and various frameworks have been developed to reduce this redundancy and synthesize information content. Despite broad recognition that community and invasion ecology are interconnected, a process-based framework synthesizing models across these two fields is lacking.

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Ecological network structure is maintained by a generalist core of common species. However, rare species contribute substantially to both the species and functional diversity of networks. Capturing changes in species composition and interactions, measured as turnover, is central to understanding the contribution of rare and common species and their interactions.

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  • The article emphasizes the urgent need to address the biodiversity crisis and its impact on ecosystems.
  • It highlights the financial costs associated with invasive species and the significant consequences they have on native wildlife.
  • The role of human actions in exacerbating these issues is critical and should be a focal point in conservation efforts.
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Incidence, or compositional, matrices are generated for a broad range of research applications in biology. Zeta diversity provides a common currency and conceptual framework that links incidence-based metrics with multiple patterns of interest in biology, ecology, and biodiversity science. It quantifies the variation in species (or OTU) composition of multiple assemblages (or cases) in space or time, to capture the contribution of the full suite of narrow, intermediate, and wide-ranging species to biotic heterogeneity.

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Critical thermal limits (CTLs) show much variation associated with the experimental rate of temperature change used in their estimation. Understanding the full range of variation in rate effects on CTLs and their underlying basis is thus essential if methodological noise is not to overwhelm or bias the ecological signal. We consider the effects of rate variation from multiple intraspecific assessments and provide a comprehensive empirical analysis of the rate effects on both the critical thermal maximum (CT) and critical thermal minimum (CT) for 47 species of ectotherms, exploring which of the available theoretical models best explains this variation.

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Communities comprising alien species with different residence times are natural experiments allowing the assessment of drivers of community assembly over time. Stochastic processes (such as dispersal and fluctuating environments) should be the dominant factors structuring communities of exotic species with short residence times. In contrast, communities should become more similar, or systematically diverge, if they contain exotics with increasing resident times, due to the increasing importance of deterministic processes (such as environmental filtering).

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Neutral and niche processes are generally considered to interact in natural communities along a continuum, exhibiting community patterns bounded by pure neutral and pure niche processes. The continuum concept uses niche separation, an attribute of the community, to test the hypothesis that communities are bounded by pure niche or pure neutral conditions. It does not accommodate interactions via feedback between processes and the environment.

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The dynamic nature of their internal states and the environment directly shape animals' spatial behaviours and give rise to emergent properties at broader scales in natural systems. However, integrating these dynamic features into habitat selection studies remains challenging, due to practically impossible field work to access internal states and the inability of current statistical models to produce dynamic outputs. To address these issues, we developed a robust method, which combines statistical and individual-based modelling.

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Predators impact prey populations not only by consuming individuals, but also by altering their behaviours. These nonlethal effects can influence food web properties as much as lethal effects. The mechanisms of nonlethal effects include chronic and temporary anti-predator behaviours, the nature of which depends on the spatial dynamics of predators and the range over which prey perceive risk.

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