Modeling scale-dependent landscape pattern, dispersal, and connectivity from the perspective of the organism
Authored by Steven Walters
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-006-9065-3
Sponsors:
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Understanding the impacts of habitat fragmentation on dispersal is an
important issue in landscape and conservation ecology. Here I examine
the effects of fine- to broad-scale patterns in landscape structure on
dispersal success of organisms with differing life-history traits. An
individual-based model was used to simulate dispersal of amphibian-like
species whose movements were driven by land cover and moisture
conditions. To systematically control spatial pattern, a landscape model
was created by merging simulated land cover maps with synthetic
topographic surfaces. Landscapes varied in topographic roughness and
spatial contagion in agriculture and urban land cover. Simulations
included three different species types that varied in their maximum
potential dispersal distances by 1-, 2-, or 4-fold. Two sets of
simulations addressed effects of varying aspects of landscape structure
on dispersal success. In the first set of simulations, which
incorporated variable distances between breeding patches, dispersal
success was lowest for all species types when anthropogenic cover was
patchily distributed. In the second set, with interpatch distances held
constant as landscape composition varied, dispersal success decreased as
anthropogenic cover became spatially contagious. Both sets revealed
strong main effects of species characteristics, interpatch distances and
landscape composition on dispersal success; furthermore, scale-dependent
patterns in land cover and moisture gradients had a stronger effect on
longer- than shorter-ranging species types. Taken together, these
simulations suggest that heuristic conservation strategies could
potentially be developed based on important but limited life history
information.
Tags
Heterogeneity
Fragmentation
Populations
Size
Fractal landscapes
General-model
Abundance
Corridors
Extinction thresholds
Amphibians