Predicting the future spread of invasive plants in California

Publication Type  Conference Presentation
Authors  Brusati, Elizabeth
Secondary Authors  Doug Johnson; Joseph DiTomaso
Affiliations  California Invasive Plant Council; California Invasive Plant Council; UC Davis Dept. of Plant Sciences
Year  2009
Abstract  

Distribution of invasive plant populations in California is dynamic, and effectively protecting native flora requires knowledge about where invasive plants are and where they may spread in the future. We determined statewide distribution of 36 invasive plants in California by surveying local resource managers in all counties. Using CLIMEX modeling software, we estimated climatic suitability for each plant throughout California based on its known distribution elsewhere in the world. Combined, these data provide information on potential future spread in the state. This information will be disseminated to support early detection efforts by helping local managers determine which invasive plants are most likely to move into their area. Next, to determine how climate change might affect invasive plant distribution in California, we ran the models again using parameters adjusted for a 3°C increase in annual temperature. Results indicate that overall climatic suitability in California for the 36 combined species would alter little with climate change. However, certain species may be “winners” or “losers”. For example, our models predict that climate suitability will nearly double for castor bean (Ricinus communis) and fountaingrass (Pennisetum setaceum), while decreasing substantially for other species. We will present examples of projected range shifts and changes in suitability for several widespread invasive plants as well as incipient invaders that show potential to expand to new areas of California, with a focus on plants of concern in Sonoma County.

Notes  

Elizabeth Brusati works for the nonprofit California Invasive Plant Council in Berkeley. Her ecological experience has moved down the food web from birds to invertebrates to plants. She has a B.S. in Wildlife and Fisheries Biology from UC Davis and an M.S. in Wildlife Science from Texas A&M, where her thesis project compared the use of natural and created marshes by shorebirds and wading birds along the South Texas coast. She then returned to UC Davis to complete a Ph.D. in Ecology examining the effects of hybrid Spartina cordgrass on estuarine invertebrate communities. Since 2004 she has been a Program Manager at Cal-IPC, where her projects include the Invasive Plant Inventory, the Cal-HIP horticultural partnership, the Cal-IPC newsletter, and developing predictive models to assess where invasive plants are most likely to spread as climate change progresses.

Conference Name  2009 State of the Laguna Conference and Science Symposium
Presentation Type: 
Talk
Progress: 
Complete
AttachmentSize
2_Brusati_Wed Session 2.pdf2.22 MB