Non-native species can have profound implications on the survival of native ones. This is especially true for some invasive crabs, such as the green crab Carcinus maenas, a native species to the Northern Hemisphere that has been introduced into southern Argentina, from where it could expand through Argentina, Chile, and the Antarctic Peninsula. Hence, there is interest in forecasting changes in C. maenas habitat suitability through time to predict if potential future invasions might occur. Here, by using a Species Distribution Model (SDM) approach, we estimated the habitat suitability for C. maenas along southern South America and the Antarctic Peninsula under two future climate-change scenarios. Our results reveal that under current condit...
The European Green Crab (Carcinus maenas) is a global invader, successfully colonizing many world re...
Aim Correlative species distribution models (SDMs) are subject to substantial spatio‐temporal limit...
Aim Correlative Species Distribution Models (SDMs) are subject to substantial spatio-temporal limit...
18 pagesInternational audienceThe potential for biological colonization of Antarctic shores is an in...
Rising sea temperature, as a result of anthropogenic climate change, has contributed to dynamic ecol...
Invasive alien species and climate change are two of the most serious global environmental threats. ...
Shrimps have a widespread distribution across the shelf, slope and seamount regions of the Southern ...
<div><p>Recent scientific interest following the “discovery” of lithodid crabs around Antarctica has...
Ocean acidification and ocean warming are the two components of climate change that impacts marine l...
Coastal lobsters support important fisheries all over the world, but there is evidence that climate-...
Recent scientific interest following the “discovery” of lithodid crabs around Antarctica has centred...
Anthropogenic climate change resulting in warming of global oceanic temperatures will likely allow t...
Lithodid crabs (and other skeleton-crushing predators) may have been excluded from cold Antarctic co...
Benthic assemblages of the Antarctic continental shelf are dominated by sessile and slow-moving, epi...
The European Green Crab (Carcinus maenas) is a global invader, successfully colonizing many world re...
Aim Correlative species distribution models (SDMs) are subject to substantial spatio‐temporal limit...
Aim Correlative Species Distribution Models (SDMs) are subject to substantial spatio-temporal limit...
18 pagesInternational audienceThe potential for biological colonization of Antarctic shores is an in...
Rising sea temperature, as a result of anthropogenic climate change, has contributed to dynamic ecol...
Invasive alien species and climate change are two of the most serious global environmental threats. ...
Shrimps have a widespread distribution across the shelf, slope and seamount regions of the Southern ...
<div><p>Recent scientific interest following the “discovery” of lithodid crabs around Antarctica has...
Ocean acidification and ocean warming are the two components of climate change that impacts marine l...
Coastal lobsters support important fisheries all over the world, but there is evidence that climate-...
Recent scientific interest following the “discovery” of lithodid crabs around Antarctica has centred...
Anthropogenic climate change resulting in warming of global oceanic temperatures will likely allow t...
Lithodid crabs (and other skeleton-crushing predators) may have been excluded from cold Antarctic co...
Benthic assemblages of the Antarctic continental shelf are dominated by sessile and slow-moving, epi...
The European Green Crab (Carcinus maenas) is a global invader, successfully colonizing many world re...
Aim Correlative species distribution models (SDMs) are subject to substantial spatio‐temporal limit...
Aim Correlative Species Distribution Models (SDMs) are subject to substantial spatio-temporal limit...