Recent Studies of Invasion Ecology in the Mediterranean Basin
A special issue of Diversity (ISSN 1424-2818). This special issue belongs to the section "Biodiversity Loss & Dynamics".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2023) | Viewed by 15703
Special Issue Editors
Interests: invasive alien species; invasion ecology; ecosystem functioning; biodiversity and conservation
Interests: biodiversity and ecosystem processes; functional plant ecology; community ecology; biodiversity conservation; conservation policy
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The Mediterranean Basin is one of the world’s richest regions in terms of plant and animal diversity and one of the 34 biodiversity hotspots recognized globally. Moreover, this diverse area hosts an exceptional heterogeneity of natural and cultural landscapes that have coexisted and coevolved for centuries. Unfortunately, as a result of the interactive effects of major components of global environmental change, it is also expected to suffer severe proportional changes in biodiversity and ecosystem functioning.
Biological invasions are also considered a key driver of biodiversity and ecosystem degradation that affects human and social wellbeing at local, regional, and global scales. Although habitats in the Mediterranean Basin, compared to other Mediterranean-climate regions, seem to be the most resistant to biological invasions, the ongoing spread of invasive alien species (IAS), along with other socioeconomic factors, such as land use changes, land abandonment, expansion of the tourist industry, and intense anthropogenic activity particularly on islands and coastal habitats, suggest an urgency in studying, understanding, and managing biological invasions in the region.
In this Special Issue, we focus on terrestrial, marine, and freshwater ecosystems in the Mediterranean Basin, with a special interest in protected areas and islands. We welcome the submission of manuscripts that address biological invasions from various perspectives, including IAS surveys, trait, climatic niche, and spatial patterns studies, pathway and vector analyses, risk assessments and eradication campaigns reports, environmental and socioeconomic impact estimations, and conservation and management strategies.
Dr. Alexandros Galanidis
Prof. Dr. Panayiotis Dimitrakopoulos
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- species surveys
- species traits
- climatic niche
- spatial distribution
- pathways and vectors
- risk assessments
- eradication
- impacts
- economic cost
- conservation and management
- protected areas
- islands
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