Role of Human-Mediated Dispersal in the Spread of the Pinewood Nematode in China
Authored by Christelle Robinet, Alain Roques, Hongyang Pan, Guofei Fang, Jianren Ye, Yanzhuo Zhang, Jianghua Sun
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004646
Sponsors:
European Union
Chinese National Natural Science Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Intensification of world trade is responsible for an
increase in the number of alien species introductions. Human-mediated
dispersal promotes not only introductions but also expansion of the
species distribution via long-distance dispersal. Thus, understanding
the role of anthropogenic pathways in the spread of invading species has
become one of the most important challenges nowadays.
Methodology/Principal Findings: We analysed the invasion pattern of the
pinewood nematode in China based on invasion data from 1982 to 2005 and
monitoring data on 7 locations over 15 years. Short distance spread
mediated by long-horned beetles was estimated at 7.5 km per year.
Infested sites located further away represented more than 90\% of
observations and the mean long distance spread was estimated at 111-339
km. Railways, river ports, and lakes had significant effects on the
spread pattern. Human population density levels explained 87\% of the
variation in the invasion probability (P<0.05). Since 2001, the number
of new records of the nematode was multiplied by a factor of 5 and the
spread distance by a factor of 2. We combined a diffusion model to
describe the short distance spread with a stochastic, individual based
model to describe the long distance jumps. This combined model generated
an error of only 13\% when used to predict the presence of the nematode.
Under two climate scenarios (stable climate or moderate warming), projections of the invasion probability suggest that this pest could
expand its distribution 40-55\% by 2025.
Conclusions/Significance: This study provides evidence that
human-induced dispersal plays a fundamental role in the spread of the
pinewood nematode, and appropriate control measures should be taken to
stop or slow its expansion. This model can be applied to Europe, where
the nematode had been introduced later, and is currently expanding its
distribution. Similar models could also be derived for other species
that could be accidentally transported by humans.
Tags
Prediction
Long-distance dispersal
Success
Coleoptera
Biological invasions
Bursaphelenchus-xylophilus
Wilt disease
Economic-development
Cameraria-ohridella
Sawyer