Changes in behavioural responses to infrastructure affect local and regional connectivity - a simulation study on pond breeding amphibians
Authored by Maj-Britt Pontoppidan, Gosta Nachman
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.3897/natureconservation.5.4611
Sponsors:
Danish Road Directorate
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
An extensive and expanding infrastructural network destroys and
fragments natural habitat and has detrimental effect on abundance and
population viability of many amphibian species. Roads function as
barriers in the landscape. They separate local populations from each
other or prevent access to necessary resources. Therefore, road density
and traffic intensity in a region may have severe impact on regional as
well as local connectivity. Amphibians may be able to detect and avoid
unsuitable habitat. Individuals' ability to avoid roads can reduce road
mortality but at the same time road avoidance behaviour, can increase
the barrier effect of the road and reduce connectivity. We use an
individual based model to explore how changes in road mortality and road
avoidance behaviour affect local and regional connectivity in a
population of Moor frogs (Rana arvalis). The results indicate that road
mortality has a strong negative effect on regional connectivity, but
only a small effect on local connectivity. Regional connectivity is
positively affected by road avoidance and the effect becomes more
pronounced as road mortality decreases. Road avoidance also has a
positive effect on local connectivity. When road avoidance is total and
the road functions as a 100\% barrier regional connectivity is close to
zero, while local connectivity exhibit very elevated values. The results
suggest that roads may affect not only regional or metapopulation
dynamics but also have a direct effect on local population dynamics.
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