Hawaiian Islands habitat suitability models for highly invasive plants based on global and regional data for baseline climate scenario (1990-2009)
Dates
Start Date
1990
End Date
2009
Publication Date
2024-02-15
Citation
Berio Fortini, L., and Kaiser, L.R., 2024, Hawaiian Islands habitat suitability models for highly invasive plants based on global and regional data for baseline climate scenario (1990-2009): U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9Z8MEGP.
Summary
We created a comprehensive estimate of potential distribution for a subset of 17 ecosystem modifying invasive plants (EMIPs) in Hawaiʻi. This work uses methods that integrate a wide set of data sources including agency and citizen science data, but perhaps more importantly, the integration of regional and global distribution information for these species. We built three sets of ensemble species distribution models (SDMs) for each species. We first built global and regional ensemble distribution models for each species. Then, to create a comprehensive estimate of potential invasive species distribution for our study species in Hawaiʻi, we built nested regional models that integrate our global and regional ensemble models. This approach [...]
Summary
We created a comprehensive estimate of potential distribution for a subset of 17 ecosystem modifying invasive plants (EMIPs) in Hawaiʻi. This work uses methods that integrate a wide set of data sources including agency and citizen science data, but perhaps more importantly, the integration of regional and global distribution information for these species. We built three sets of ensemble species distribution models (SDMs) for each species. We first built global and regional ensemble distribution models for each species. Then, to create a comprehensive estimate of potential invasive species distribution for our study species in Hawaiʻi, we built nested regional models that integrate our global and regional ensemble models. This approach and the resulting mapped distributions are the most comprehensive to date for Hawaiian invasive plants and can possibly be applied more broadly to other species in the future. These models are available as both habitat suitability maps with pixel values ranging from 0 (low suitability) to 1 (high suitability); and as binary maps that separate areas of potential presence (1) from those where presence is not expected (0) based on the environmental predictors considered.
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0_Invasives_LandingPage.xml Original FGDC Metadata
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EMIP_species_names.csv
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landing_page_nested_sdm.png “An example of a nested habitat suitability model for Psidium Cattleianum. ”
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Related External Resources
Type: Related Primary Publication
Berio Fortini, L., L. R. Kaiser, C. C. Daehler, J. D. Jacobi, M. Dimson, and T. W. Gillespie. 2024. Exploring and integrating differences in niche characteristics across regional and global scales to better understand plant invasions in Hawaiʻi. Biological Invasions 26:1827–1843. Available: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-024-03284-8
Despite a wide interest by conservation practitioners, there are limited reliable estimates of potential distributions for most invasive plant species across the Hawaiian Islands. To better understand current invasive plant species distributions and potential future regional spread, we used a nested modeling approach to integrate global and regional invasive species distribution projections, which provides a way to comprehensively approximate the potential full realized niche for a species, instead of just its current regional distribution. These models can be used to project potential distributions of invasive species to help prioritize conservation and management efforts such as monitoring and control.
Preview Image
An example of a nested habitat suitability model for Psidium Cattleianum.