2007
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2007.0148
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Climatic similarity and biological exchange in the worldwide airline transportation network

Abstract: Recent increases in the rates of biological invasion and spread of infectious diseases have been linked to the continued expansion of the worldwide airline transportation network (WAN). Here, the global structure of the WAN is analysed in terms of climatic similarity to illuminate the risk of deliberate or accidental movements of climatically sensitive organisms around the world. From over 44,000 flight routes, we show, for each month of an average year, (i) those scheduled routes that link the most spatially … Show more

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Cited by 81 publications
(89 citation statements)
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“…Equally compelling are detailed analyses of invasion transport vector behaviour, including building connectivity networks using transportation information (e.g. Tatem & Hay, 2007;Tatem, 2009). Most of these proxies have not been adapted for use in quantifying relative differences in colonization pressure, but the opportunity for their logical extension to that context is apparent.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Equally compelling are detailed analyses of invasion transport vector behaviour, including building connectivity networks using transportation information (e.g. Tatem & Hay, 2007;Tatem, 2009). Most of these proxies have not been adapted for use in quantifying relative differences in colonization pressure, but the opportunity for their logical extension to that context is apparent.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, much less is known about inadvertent introductions, although they are just as significant a source of biological invasions (17). When such studies are undertaken, they are frequently based on vector numbers (such as human, shipping, or aircraft traffic) as a proxy for propagule pressure and establishment risk (18,19), rather than on the spatially explicit quantification of the numbers of vectors, the propagule size of each individual vector, and the origins and establishment likelihood of the propagules carried. Thus, inadvertent introductions are far more poorly understood than others (10,17,20).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whydahs were regularly observed as free-living on Oahu during the 1960s through to the 1980s, indicating that they had the opportunity to escape captivity and become free-living in the past. These released individuals either failed to breed at all or the nascent population they established eventually became locally extinct, possibly due to co-occurring declines in populations of estrildid hosts on Oahu (Pyle and Pyle 2009 (Duncan et al 2001, Tatem and Hay 2007, Blackburn et al 2009). By contrast, our preferred model may produce unrealistically high suitability estimates if biotic interactions (e.g., novel host species or food sources) are identified as important for whydahs at a smaller scale or extent than our attribute layers can portray (Wisz et al 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%