Genomic tools in biological invasions: Current state and future frontiers
Genomic tools in biological invasions: Current state and future frontiers
Date
2023-12-18
Authors
McGaughran, Angela
Dhami, Manpreet K.
Parvizi, Elahe
Vaughan, Amy L.
Gleeson, Dianne M.
Hodgins, Kathryn A.
Rollins, Lee A.
Tepolt, Carolyn K.
Turner, Kathryn G.
Atsawawaranunt, Kamolphat
Battlay, Paul
Congrains, Carlos
Crottini, Angelica
Dennis, Tristan P. W.
Lange, Claudia
Liu, Xiaoyue P.
Matheson, Paige
North, Henry L.
Popovic, Iva
Rius, Marc
Santure, Anna W.
Stuart, Katarina C.
Tan, Hui Zhen
Wang, Cui
Wilson, Jonathan M.
Dhami, Manpreet K.
Parvizi, Elahe
Vaughan, Amy L.
Gleeson, Dianne M.
Hodgins, Kathryn A.
Rollins, Lee A.
Tepolt, Carolyn K.
Turner, Kathryn G.
Atsawawaranunt, Kamolphat
Battlay, Paul
Congrains, Carlos
Crottini, Angelica
Dennis, Tristan P. W.
Lange, Claudia
Liu, Xiaoyue P.
Matheson, Paige
North, Henry L.
Popovic, Iva
Rius, Marc
Santure, Anna W.
Stuart, Katarina C.
Tan, Hui Zhen
Wang, Cui
Wilson, Jonathan M.
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DOI
10.1093/gbe/evad230
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Keywords
Biological invasion
Invasion genomics
Invasive species
Pest
Management
Invasion genomics
Invasive species
Pest
Management
Abstract
Human activities are accelerating rates of biological invasions and climate-driven range expansions globally, yet we understand little of how genomic processes facilitate the invasion process. Although most of the literature has focused on underlying phenotypic correlates of invasiveness, advances in genomic technologies are showing a strong link between genomic variation and invasion success. Here, we consider the ability of genomic tools and technologies to (i) inform mechanistic understanding of biological invasions and (ii) solve real-world issues in predicting and managing biological invasions. For both, we examine the current state of the field and discuss how genomics can be leveraged in the future. In addition, we make recommendations pertinent to broader research issues, such as data sovereignty, metadata standards, collaboration, and science communication best practices that will require concerted efforts from the global invasion genomics community.
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© The Author(s), 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in McGaughran, A., Dhami, M., Parvizi, E., Vaughan, A., Gleeson, D., Hodgins, K., Rollins, L., Tepolt, C., Turner, K., Atsawawaranunt, K., Battlay, P., Congrains, C., Crottini, A., Dennis, T., Lange, C., Liu, X., Matheson, P., North, H., Popovic, I., Rius, M., Santure, A. W., Stuart, K. C., Tan, H. Z., Wang, C., & Wilson, J. (2023). Genomic tools in biological invasions: Current state and future frontiers. Genome Biology and Evolution, evad230, https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evad230.
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Citation
McGaughran, A., Dhami, M., Parvizi, E., Vaughan, A., Gleeson, D., Hodgins, K., Rollins, L., Tepolt, C., Turner, K., Atsawawaranunt, K., Battlay, P., Congrains, C., Crottini, A., Dennis, T., Lange, C., Liu, X., Matheson, P., North, H., Popovic, I., Rius, M., Santure, A. W., Stuart, K. C., Tan, H. Z., Wang, C., & Wilson, J. (2023). Genomic tools in biological invasions: Current state and future frontiers. Genome Biology and Evolution, evad230.