Michael Kuttner
University of Vienna
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Featured researches published by Michael Kuttner.
Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2017
Iwona Dullinger; Johannes Wessely; Oliver Bossdorf; Wayne Dawson; Franz Essl; Andreas Gattringer; Günther Klonner; Holger Kreft; Michael Kuttner; Dietmar Moser; Jan Pergl; Petr Pyšek; Wilfried Thuiller; Mark van Kleunen; Patrick Weigelt; Marten Winter; Stefan Dullinger
Abstract Aim Plant invasions often follow initial introduction with a considerable delay. The current non‐native flora of a region may hence contain species that are not yet naturalized but may become so in the future, especially if climate change lifts limitations on species spread. In Europe, non‐native garden plants represent a huge pool of potential future invaders. Here, we evaluate the naturalization risk from this species pool and how it may change under a warmer climate. Location Europe. Methods We selected all species naturalized anywhere in the world but not yet in Europe from the set of non‐native European garden plants. For this subset of 783 species, we used species distribution models to assess their potential European ranges under different scenarios of climate change. Moreover, we defined geographical hotspots of naturalization risk from those species by combining projections of climatic suitability with maps of the area available for ornamental plant cultivation. Results Under current climate, 165 species would already find suitable conditions in > 5% of Europe. Although climate change substantially increases the potential range of many species, there are also some that are predicted to lose climatically suitable area under a changing climate, particularly species native to boreal and Mediterranean biomes. Overall, hotspots of naturalization risk defined by climatic suitability alone, or by a combination of climatic suitability and appropriate land cover, are projected to increase by up to 102% or 64%, respectively. Main conclusions Our results suggest that the risk of naturalization of European garden plants will increase with warming climate, and thus it is very likely that the risk of negative impacts from invasion by these plants will also grow. It is therefore crucial to increase awareness of the possibility of biological invasions among horticulturalists, particularly in the face of a warming climate.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2014
Denis Kutnjak; Michael Kuttner; Marjan Niketić; Stefan Dullinger; Peter Schönswetter; Božo Frajman
The Balkans are a major European biodiversity hotspot, however, almost nothing is known about processes of intraspecific diversification of the regions high-altitude biota and their reaction to the predicted global warming. To fill this gap, genome size measurements, AFLP fingerprints, plastid and nuclear sequences were employed to explore the phylogeography of Cerastium dinaricum. Range size changes under future climatic conditions were predicted by niche-based modeling. Likely the most cold-adapted plant endemic to the Dinaric Mountains in the western Balkan Peninsula, the species has conservation priority in the European Union as its highly fragmented distribution range includes only few small populations. A deep phylogeographic split paralleled by divergent genome size separates the populations into two vicariant groups. Substructure is pronounced within the southeastern group, corresponding to the areas higher geographic complexity. Cerastium dinaricum likely responded to past climatic oscillations with altitudinal range shifts, which, coupled with high topographic complexity of the region and warmer climate in the Holocene, sculptured its present fragmented distribution. Field observations revealed that the species is rarer than previously assumed and, as shown by modeling, severely endangered by global warming as viable habitat was predicted to be reduced by more than 70% by the year 2080.
Journal of Vegetation Science | 2018
Sylvia Zakkak; Andeja Radovic; Maria Panitsa; Kiril Vassilev; Lulëzim Shuka; Michael Kuttner; Stefan Schindler; Vassiliki Kati
1Department of Environmental & Natural Resources Management, University of Patras, Agrinio, Greece 2Department of Applied Geoinformatics and Spatial Planning, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Prague, Czech Republic 3Division of Plant Biology, Department of Biology, University of Patras, Patras, Greece 4Plant and Fungi Diversity and Resources Department, Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, Sofia, Bulgaria 5Faculty of Natural Sciences, Tirana University, Tirana, Albania 6Division of Conservation Biology, Vegetation and Landscape Ecology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria 7Department of Biological Applications and Technology, University of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece
Ecology Letters | 2018
Bernhard Kirchheimer; Johannes Wessely; Andreas Gattringer; Karl Hülber; Dietmar Moser; Christoph C. F. Schinkel; Marc S. Appelhans; Simone Klatt; Marco Caccianiga; Agnes S. Dellinger; Antoine Guisan; Michael Kuttner; Jonathan Lenoir; Luigi Maiorano; Diego Nieto-Lugilde; Christoph Plutzar; Jens-Christian Svenning; Wolfgang Willner; Elvira Hörandl; Stefan Dullinger
Abstract Asexual taxa often have larger ranges than their sexual progenitors, particularly in areas affected by Pleistocene glaciations. The reasons given for this ‘geographical parthenogenesis’ are contentious, with expansion of the ecological niche or colonisation advantages of uniparental reproduction assumed most important in case of plants. Here, we parameterized a spread model for the alpine buttercup Ranunculus kuepferi and reconstructed the joint Holocene range expansion of its sexual and apomictic cytotype across the European Alps under different simulation settings. We found that, rather than niche broadening or a higher migration rate, a shift of the apomicts niche towards colder conditions per se was crucial as it facilitated overcoming of topographical barriers, a factor likely relevant for many alpine apomicts. More generally, our simulations suggest potentially strong interacting effects of niche differentiation and reproductive modes on range formation of related sexual and asexual taxa arising from their differential sensitivity to minority cytotype disadvantage.
Ecological Indicators | 2014
Anna Hermann; Michael Kuttner; Christa Hainz-Renetzeder; Éva Konkoly-Gyuró; Ágnes Tirászi; Christiane Brandenburg; Brigitte Allex; Karen Ziener; Thomas Wrbka
Global Change Biology | 2016
Karl Hülber; Johannes Wessely; Andreas Gattringer; Dietmar Moser; Michael Kuttner; Franz Essl; Michael Leitner; Manuela Winkler; Siegrun Ertl; Wolfgang Willner; Ingrid Kleinbauer; Norbert Sauberer; Thomas Mang; Niklaus E. Zimmermann; Stefan Dullinger
Agricultural Systems | 2016
Martin Schönhart; Thomas Schauppenlehner; Michael Kuttner; Mathias Kirchner; Erwin Schmid
Ecological Indicators | 2013
Michael Kuttner; Christa Hainz-Renetzeder; Anna Hermann; Thomas Wrbka
Ecological Modelling | 2015
Christa Hainz-Renetzeder; A. Schneidergruber; Michael Kuttner; Thomas Wrbka
Nature Climate Change | 2017
Johannes Wessely; Karl Hülber; Andreas Gattringer; Michael Kuttner; Dietmar Moser; Wolfgang Rabitsch; Stefan Schindler; Stefan Dullinger; Franz Essl