Modeling Agassiz's Desert Tortoise Population Response to Anthropogenic Stressors
Authored by Michael W Tuma, Chris Millington, Nathan Schumaker, Paul Burnett
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.1044
Sponsors:
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
US Bureau of Land Management
Platforms:
HexSim
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Agassiz's desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) populations are exposed
to a variety of anthropogenic threats, which vary in nature, distribution, severity, and frequency. Tortoise management in
conservation areas can be compromised when the relative importance of
these threats is not well understood. We used HexSim to develop
simulation models for desert tortoise populations occupying 2 study
areas in the western-central (Superior Cronese in California, USA) and
the eastern (Gold Butte-Pakoon in Nevada and Arizona, USA) Mojave
Desert, each with a distinct set of site-specific threats. We developed
threats models that were parameterized from published information, and
conducted independent simulations of threats at varying levels of
severity for each study area. Modeled tortoise populations in both study
areas were subjected to simulations of threats associated with human
presence and subsidized predators. Additional simulated threats in the
Superior Cronese model included disease and habitat degradation on land
in-holdings, whereas tortoise populations in the Gold Butte-Pakoon model
were further exposed to simulations of wildfire, livestock grazing, and
feral burros. We used our 2 study area-specific simulation models to
rank the threats' relative importance to desert tortoise population
viability. Threats more widely distributed in time and space within the
modeled conservation areas significantly limited tortoise population
growth more than threats that were patchily distributed or temporally
dynamic. Our use of a spatially explicit population model allowed us to
evaluate and prioritize the effects of threats over site-specific, dynamic, simulated landscapes, which differed from previous modeling
efforts for desert tortoises. Our threat prioritization will inform and
improve ongoing management efforts attempting to increase desert
tortoise population viability by altering anthropogenic disturbance
regimes. (C) 2016 The Wildlife Society.
Tags
Individual-based model
Home-range
Egg-production
Respiratory-tract disease
Common raven
predation
Sea-turtle population
Central mojave desert
Long-lived
organisms
Gopherus-agassizii
Chelydra-serpentina