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      A biography of an invasive terrestrial slug: the spread, distribution and habitat of Deroceras invadens

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      NeoBiota
      Pensoft Publishers

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          Visualization of an Oxygen-deficient Bottom Water Circulation in Osaka Bay, Japan

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            Daily dataset of 20th-century surface air temperature and precipitation series for the European Climate Assessment

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              Physiological tolerances account for range limits and abundance structure in an invasive slug.

              Despite the importance of understanding the mechanisms underlying range limits and abundance structure, few studies have sought to do so. Here we use a terrestrial slug species, Deroceras panormitanum, that has invaded a remote, largely predator-free, Southern Ocean island as a model system to do so. Across Marion Island, slug density does not conform to an abundant centre distribution. Rather, abundance structure is characterized by patches and gaps. These are associated with this desiccation-sensitive species' preference for biotic and drainage line habitats that share few characteristics except for their high humidity below the vegetation surface. The coastal range margin has a threshold form, rapidly rising from zero to high density. Slugs do not occur where soil-exchangeable Na values are higher than 3000 mg kg(-1), and in laboratory experiments, survival is high below this value but negligible above it. Upper elevation range margins are a function of the inability of this species to survive temperatures below an absolute limit of -6.4 degrees C, which is regularly exceeded at 200 m altitude, above which slug density declines to zero. However, the linear decline in density from the coastal peak is probably also a function of a decline in performance or time available for activity. This is probably associated with an altitudinal decline in mean annual soil temperature. These findings support previous predictions made regarding the form of density change when substrate or climatic factors set range limits.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                NeoBiota
                NB
                Pensoft Publishers
                1314-2488
                1619-0033
                September 02 2014
                September 02 2014
                : 23
                : 17-64
                Article
                10.3897/neobiota.23.7745
                21025456-a04d-470a-9bdb-4aa360c6a072
                © 2014

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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