Ocean current connectivity propelling the secondary spread of a marine invasive comb jelly across western Eurasia
Date
2018Author
DAENHARDT, Andreas
BEGGS, Steven E.
Balsby, Thorsten J. S.
BOERSMA, Maarten
BONNET, Delphine
Christensen, Jens T.
DELPY, Floriane
FALKENHAUG, Tone
FINENKO, Galina
FLEMING, Nicholas E. C.
FUENTES, Veronica
Galil, Bella
GITTENBERGER, Arjan
ROBBENS, Johan
STEFANOVA, Kremena
THIBAULT, Delphine
van der Veer, Henk W.
VANSTEENBRUGGE, Lies
van Walraven, Lodewijk
WOZNICZKA, Adam
Okyar, Melek
GRIFFIN, Donal C.
HASLOB, Holger
JAVIDPOUR, Jamileh
KAMBURSKA, Lyudmila
KUBE, Sandra
LANGENBERG, Victor T.
LEHTINIEMI, Maiju
LOMBARD, Fabien
MALZAHN, Arne
MARAMBIO, Macarena
MIHNEVA, Veselina
Moller, Lene Friis
Niermann, Ulrich
Ozdemir, Zekiye Birinci
PITOIS, Sophie
REUSCH, Thorsten B. H.
Jaspers, Cornelia
Huwer, Bastian
ANTAJAN, Elvire
HOSIA, Aino
HINRICHSEN, Hans-Harald
BIASTOCH, Arne
Angel, Dror
ASMUS, Ragnhild
AUGUSTIN, Christina
BAGHERI, Siamak
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: Invasive species are of increasing global concern. Nevertheless, the mechanisms driving further distribution after the initial establishment of non-native species remain largely unresolved, especially in marine systems. Ocean currents can be a major driver governing range occupancy, but this has not been accounted for in most invasion ecology studies so far. We investigate how well initial establishment areas are interconnected to later occupancy regions to test for the potential role of ocean currents driving secondary spread dynamics in order to infer invasion corridors and the source-sink dynamics of a non-native holoplanktonic biological probe species on a continental scale.
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- Makale [92796]