Habitat Restoration from an Ecosystem Goods and Services Perspective: Application of a Spatially Explicit Individual-Based Model
Authored by R S Fulford, M Russell, J E Rogers
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-016-0100-6
Sponsors:
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Estuarine ecosystems provide many services to humans, but these
ecosystems are also under pressure from human development, which has led
to large investments in habitat protection and restoration. Restoration
in estuaries is typically focused on emergent and submerged vegetation
with the goal of achieving target areal coverage based on historic
conditions. Such restoration targets assume no spatial heterogeneity in
habitat value and bypass the functional target of restoring or
maintaining delivery of ecosystem goods and services (EGS). We have
developed a spatially explicit individual-based behavioral model
intended to explore the functional role of habitat restoration on EGS
delivery in an index system (Tampa Bay, FL) and for an index EGS
(recreational fishing). Model scenarios are based on interaction of
inter-annual differences in salinity/temperature patterns (wet, dry, average) with hindcasted ``increases{''} in coverage and distribution of
seagrass. Model predictions indicated that the effect of seagrass
restoration to historic (1950s) levels on both fish and fishery
production is dependent on salinity and temperature. This dependence is
based on predicted fish response both to habitat changes and the
effective spatial scale of different habitat components. Overall, average salinity/temperature conditions facilitated the highest positive
functional response to seagrass restoration with extreme wet/dry years
yielding lower or even negative functional responses, but these
responses were localized and not homogenous about the estuary. The
results of this study provide a methodology for using functional targets
in restoration planning and highlight the importance of considering the
entire habitat mosaic in valuing restored habitat from an EGS
perspective.
Tags
movement
Ecological model
Population-dynamics
Florida
Salt marshes
Southeastern united-states
Spotted sea-trout
Fish production
Seagrass ecosystem
Tampa bay