The importance of realistic dispersal models in conservation planning: application of a novel modelling platform to evaluate management scenarios in an Afrotropical biodiversity hotspot
Authored by Justin MJ Travis, Greta Bocedi, Stephen C F Palmer, Job Aben, Diederik Strubbe, Luc Lens, Erik Matthysen, Petri Pellikka, Caspar Hallmann
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12643
Sponsors:
European Union
Flanders Research Foundation
French Ministries
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
As biodiversity hotspots are often characterized by high human
population densities, implementation of conservation management
practices that focus only on the protection and enlargement of pristine
habitats is potentially unrealistic. An alternative approach to curb
species extinction risk involves improving connectivity among existing
habitat patches. However, evaluation of spatially explicit management
strategies is challenging, as predictive models must account for the
process of dispersal, which is difficult in terms of both empirical data
collection and modelling. Here, we use a novel, individual-based
modelling platform that couples demographic and mechanistic dispersal
models to evaluate the effectiveness of realistic management scenarios
tailored to conserve forest birds in a highly fragmented biodiversity
hotspot. Scenario performance is evaluated based on the spatial
population dynamics of a well-studied forest bird species. The largest
population increase was predicted to occur under scenarios increasing
habitat area. However, the effectiveness was sensitive to spatial
planning. Compared to adding one large patch to the habitat network, adding several small patches yielded mixed benefits: although overall
population sizes increased, specific newly created patches acted as
dispersal sinks, which compromised population persistence in some
existing patches. Increasing matrix connectivity by the creation of
stepping stones is likely to result in enhanced dispersal success and
occupancy of smaller patches.Synthesis and applications. We show that
the effectiveness of spatial management is strongly driven by patterns
of individual dispersal across landscapes. For species conservation
planning, we advocate the use of models that incorporate adequate
realism in demography and, particularly, in dispersal behaviours.
Tags
connectivity
population
fragmented landscapes
habitat
Climate-change
Forest
Range expansion
Movement behavior
Understory bird community
Stepping stones