Habitat degradation and loss as key drivers of regional population extinction
Authored by Nathan H Schumaker, Julie A Heinrichs, Darren J Bender
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmode1.2016.05.009
Sponsors:
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Abstract
Habitat quality is a fundamental driver of species distributions and
population outcomes but is often difficult to measure and compare
alongside measures of habitat amount and fragmentation. Consequently, habitat quality is often omitted from many landscape-level habitat
analyses or more indirectly or subjectively represented in resulting
habitat management or conservation planning. Yet, the implications of
this conceptual and planning omission are poorly understood. We lack
general theory that identifies the conditions under which habitat
quality is expected to play a vital role in characterizing local and
regional population responses. Using a factorial simulation design, we
examined the independent contributions of habitat quality, amount, and
fragmentation to population persistence to identify the conditions under
which habitat quality might be expected to play a more important role
than those of habitat amount or fragmentation. We generated a wide range
of fractal landscapes, independently varying in habitat amount, fragmentation, and quality in QRule. We simulated interactive animal
movement, habitat selection, and persistence for r and K strategist
species with short and long dispersal abilities using spatially explicit
individual-based models developed in HexSim. Population abundance and
extinction risk were recorded through time for each landscape-species
combination and used to quantify the relative influence of habitat
amount, fragmentation, and landscape quality on population outcomes. We
found that habitat degradation influenced extinction risk through a wide
range of landscape conditions and species attributes. The most severe
extinction responses were observed in scenarios of combined habitat loss
and degradation, suggesting that the interactive effects of these
variables may greatly affect persistence. Landscape quality modified
extinction risks associated with habitat amount-fragmentation
thresholds, and we found evidence for quality-based extinction
thresholds as habitat was degraded. The strength of landscape-level
quality on extinction risk outcomes suggests that habitat degradation
should be further investigated as a major driver of population responses
to landscape change. A more inclusive paradigm may be required to
elucidate the general influences landscape change on population
extinction. Habitat degradation, along with habitat loss and
fragmentation, should be explicitly considered when assessing the
implications of landscape change on population extinction. (C) 2016
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
models
Landscape
Heterogeneity
birds
Fragmentation
Quality
Area
Size
Metapopulation dynamics
Relative importance