Publication details

GUBIC : The global urban biological invasions compendium for plants

Authors

LI Daijiang POTGIETER Luke J ARONSON Myla F J AXMANOVÁ Irena BAISER Benjamin CARBONI Marta CELESTI-GRAPOW Laura KNAPP Sonja KUEHN Ingolf CAROLINA Lacerda de Matos Ana LOSOSOVÁ Zdeňka MONTANO-CENTELLAS Flavia A PYSEK Petr RICHARDSON David M TROTTA Lauren B ZENNI Rafael D CILLIERS Sarel S CLARKSON Bruce D DAVIS Amy J S DOLAN Rebecca W DYDERSKI Marcin K ESSL Franz GAOUE Orou G GUI Joanne GERON Charly HERINGER Gustavo HUI Cang KHUROO Anzar A KLOTZ Stefan KOTANEN Peter M KREFT Holger LA SORTE Frank A LEMBRECHTS Jonas J LENZNER Bernd LEPCZYK Christopher A MACIVOR Scott MARTINEZ-GARZA Cristina MORI Akira S NILON Charles PERGL Jan SIEBERT Stefan J TRETYAKOVA Alyona S TSANG Toby P N UCHIDA Kei MARK van Kleunen VILA Montserrat WANG Hua-Feng WEIGELT Patrick WERNER Peter WILLIAMS Nicholas S G WINTER Marten CADOTTE Marc W

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source ECOLOGICAL SOLUTIONS AND EVIDENCE
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.70020
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.70020
Keywords Alien species; biodiversity change; biological invasions; cities; naturalized species; non-native plants; urbanization
Description Urban areas are foci for the introduction of non-native plant species, and they often act as launching sites for invasions into the wider environment. Although interest in biological invasions in urban areas is growing rapidly, and the extent and complexity of problems associated with invasions in these systems have increased, data on the composition and numbers of non-native plants in urbanized areas remain scattered and idiosyncratic. We assembled data from multiple sources to create the Global Urban Biological Invasions Compendium (GUBIC) for vascular plants representing 553 urban centres from 61 countries across every continent except Antarctica. The GUBIC repository includes 8140 non-native plant species from 253 families. The number of urban centres in which these non-native species occurred had a log-normal distribution, with 65.2% of non-native species occurring in fewer than 10 urban centres. Practical implications: The dataset has wider applications for urban ecology, invasion biology, macroecology, conservation, urban planning and sustainability. We hope this dataset will stimulate future research in invasion ecology related to the diversity and distributional patterns of non-native flora across urban centres worldwide. Further, this information should aid the early detection and risk assessment of potential invasive species, inform policy development and assist in setting management priorities.
Related projects:

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.

More info