New Alien Plant Taxa for Italy and Europe: An Update

Plants (Basel). 2024 Feb 24;13(5):620. doi: 10.3390/plants13050620.

Abstract

Despite the wide amount of scientific contributions published on alien plant species, their diffusion dynamics, and their interactions with native taxa, it is increasingly difficult to slow down their spreading and their negative impact on habitats. Last recent years, in fact, a sharp rise in the number of new alien plant taxa introduced in Italy and Europe has been recorded. The aim of this work is to investigate most of the Italian territory in order to verify whether this alarming trend is still underway. Specimen collections and/or observations of alien plants have been performed in as many as 12 Italian regions. All the collected specimens are stored in public or private herbaria. Taxa have been identified according to the literature from the countries of origin of the investigated taxa, while the nomenclature followed the current international references. Updates on 106 taxa are reported. In particular, among 117 new records, 89 are first records, 27 are changes to status and there is 1 extinction. Seven new taxa for Italian alien flora are reported, two of which are new to Europe. The administrative regions with the highest number of records are Calabria (48), Sardegna (17) and Sicilia (15). Five of the surveyed taxa, for the first time, have been considered invasive aliens to Italian territory. The unfrequent amount of original results provided by this work, over the simple importance of data itself, proves how floristic investigation, still today, represents one of the most effective tools in broadening the current knowledge about alien taxa and their dynamics.

Keywords: IAS; Italian regions; biodiversity; biological invasions; floristic list; herbarium; species distribution.

Grants and funding

Part of this research carried out in some areas of the Calabrian territory (C.M.M., V.L.A.L., G.S.) was financed by the project “SISTEMA CARTA NATURA”—CUP: 39C20000210002. Part of this research carried out in some areas of the Sicilian territory (P.M., S.C.) was financed by the project, “INTERREG V-A ITALIA-MALTA 2014–2020 Axis III—Objective 3.1 FAST—Fight Alien Species Transborder”—CUP: E99C20000160005.