ABSTRACT Climate change is altering freshwater ecosystems, causing extinctions, range expansions, and facilitating biological invasions. Colonization by novel species can drastically affect local biodiversity, particularly in aquatic habitats. Lethocerus patruelis (Stål, 1854) is a large predatory aquatic insect whose distribution spans from the Balkans to south‐eastern Asia. In the last decades, L. patruelis sightings outside its known range have increased, particularly in Italy. The aim of this study was to assess the drivers of this expansion and the potential for future spread. We collected records of L. patruelis using published literature, citizen‐science platforms, and social media. These data were used to test for directional expansion and to compare historical and novel niches. Second, we used observations from the historical range of the species to create a suitability model using MaxEnt, testing it using observations from Italy. Finally, we projected the model under three future climatic scenarios to assess the potential for future expansions. We detected a significant westward and southward expansion of L. patruelis in Italy. Niche conservatism between historical and novel ranges was observed. Nonetheless, we found limited overlap and a high level of niche unfilling, suggesting an ongoing colonization process. The suitability model showed good predictive performance, indicating a preference toward Mediterranean climates and a selection against agricultural areas. Suitable areas were predicted to increase under all three future climatic scenarios. This study suggests an ongoing spread of L. patruelis and a strong expansion potential in Europe facilitated by climate change.
Range Expansion of the Giant Water Bug Lethocerus patruelis (Stål, 1854) in Europe
Andrea Simoncini,Filippo Tomasi,G. F. Ficetola,Elia Lo Parrino
Published 2025 in Ecology and Evolution
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- Publication year
2025
- Venue
Ecology and Evolution
- Publication date
2025-11-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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