ARPHA Preprints, doi: 10.3897/arphapreprints.e121786
From caves to continents: phylogeography and niche shift of an invasive subterranean spider
expand article infoFrancesco Ballarin§, Zhixin Zhang|, Shuqiang Li#, Stefano Mammola¤«
‡ Tokyo Metropolitan University, Tokyo, Japan§ Museo Civico di Storia Naturale of Verona, Verona, Italy| CAS Key Laboratory of Tropical Marine Bio-resources and Ecology, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China¶ Global Ocean and Climate Research Center, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, China# Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China¤ Molecular Ecology Group (MEG), Water Research Institute National Research Council of Italy (CNR-IRSA), Verbania Pallanza, Italy« NBFC, National Biodiversity Future Center, Palermo, Italy
Open Access
Abstract

Invasive non-native species are recognized as a serious threat to the native biodiversity of the areas they colonize. The subterranean spider Howaia mogera (Yaginuma 1972) (syn. Nesticella mogera) is considered a highly invasive non-native species rapidly expanding its geographical range from Asia across the European continent and to remote oceanic islands. Due to its preference for moist, dark, and climatically stable habitats, including caves, this spider represents a potential threat to the endemic fauna living in the forest litter and subterranean environments. Nevertheless, the origin, biogeography, patterns of colonization, and niche preference of H. mogera remain unexplored. In this study, we reconstructed the phylogeography of the species combining a multi-locus phylogenetic analysis and a niche modeling approach. Our results confirm the center of origin of H. mogera in southern China, from where the species naturally spread and diversified in eastern Asia during the Pleistocene Epoch. Its expansion into non-native areas occurred only recently, possibly as a consequence of human-mediated passive transportation and in conjunction with a shift in the habitat preference of the species. Non-native populations have shifted from an original preference for a subterranean lifestyle to more generalist conditions. This change has allowed them to exploit a wider breadth of habitats and has facilitated their expansion in Europe and remote oceanic islands. Yet, the retention of the original subterranean habitat preferences in these non-native populations poses a conservation threat to specialized and fragile subterranean ecosystems, which H. mogera can efficiently exploit in invaded areas. Our study underscores the importance of comprehending phylogeography and niche dynamics in invasive non-native species to predict and manage their future expansions. We further highlight the urgency of monitoring H. mogera's spread worldwide, particularly in Southern Europe, to protect fragile invaded ecosystems.

Keywords
biogeography, conservation, fragile ecosystems, invasive non-native species, niche expansion, subterranean habitats