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Premise: Competition from naturalized species and habitat loss are common threats to native biodiversity and may act synergistically to increase competition for decreasing habitat availability. We use Hawaiian dryland ferns as a model for the interactions between land-use change and competition from naturalized species in determining habitat availability.
Methods: We used fine-resolution climatic variables and carefully curated occurrence data from herbaria and community science repositories to estimate the distributions of Hawaiian dryland ferns. We quantified the degree to which naturalized ferns tend to occupy areas suitable for native species and mapped the remaining available habitat given land-use change.
Results: Of all native species, had the lowest percentage of occurrences of naturalized species in its suitable area while had the highest. However, all spp. had a higher percentage overlap, while had a lower percentage overlap, than expected by chance. and had the lowest proportions (20%) of suitable area covering native habitat.
Discussion: Areas characterized by shared environmental preferences of native and naturalized ferns may decrease due to human development and fallowed agricultural lands. Our study demonstrates the value of place-based application of a recently developed correlative ecological niche modeling approach for conservation risk assessment in a rapidly changing and urbanized island ecosystem.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aps3.11598 | DOI Listing |
Plants (Basel)
August 2025
Independent Researcher, E 6323 S Rosebury Ave 1 W, Saint Louis, MO 63105, USA.
Autumn fern, , is the most marketed temperate fern in the world. The rapid increase and spread of this recently naturalized fern in North America was determined and mapped using 76 herbarium specimen records and 2553 Research Grade iNaturalist posts. In 2008, it was recorded in two states, but by 2025, it was found in 25 states in the eastern United States and Ontario, Canada.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPremise: Competition from naturalized species and habitat loss are common threats to native biodiversity and may act synergistically to increase competition for decreasing habitat availability. We use Hawaiian dryland ferns as a model for the interactions between land-use change and competition from naturalized species in determining habitat availability.
Methods: We used fine-resolution climatic variables and carefully curated occurrence data from herbaria and community science repositories to estimate the distributions of Hawaiian dryland ferns.
Rev Biol Trop
March 2010
Facultad de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Salta, Av. Bolivia 5150, 4400 Salta, Argentina.
The pantropical fern genus Pteris L. has about 250 species of which 60 occur in the American continent. We studied the morphogenesis of the gametophyte, and the morphology of the young sporophytes of four species: P.
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