When corridors work: Insights from a microecosystem
Authored by Martin Hoyle
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2006.11.008
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
Microsoft Visual Basic
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0304380006005473-mmc2.doc
Abstract
Evidence for a beneficial effect of corridors on species richness and
abundance in habitat patches is mixed. Even in a single microecosystern
of microarthropods living in moss patches connected by a moss corridor, experiments have had different results (positive and neutral). This
paper attempts to provide an explanatory framework for understanding
these results. I developed a stochastic individual-based model of the
moss-microarthropod microecosystem. Some of the movement parameter
values were estimated from two manipulation experiments. Assuming
mortality independent of the season, and assuming the corridors merely
increase migration rates between patches, only a very weak beneficial
effect of corridors was possible in simulations. Incorporating a
seasonal pattern to mortality caused some simulated populations to die
out, which were then occasionally rescued by migrants from the adjacent
patch. Corridors were slightly beneficial if there was little or no
immigration from the surrounding matrix. In contrast, corridors were
very beneficial in simulations that incorporated lower emigration to the
matrix when a corridor was present, even for moderate levels of
immigration from the matrix. Thus corridors may reduce the chance of
species extinction in patches even when the lifespan of the individuals
is long relative to the time-scale in question. The beneficial effect in
this case can act via two possible mechanisms: seasonal mortality
imposing brief periods of high vulnerability to extinction, and the
presence of a corridor reducing the rate of emigration to the matrix by
encouraging movement along the corridor. Either one or both of these
mechanisms may have operated in the study whereby corridors had a
beneficial effect, but not in the study whereby corridors did not have a
beneficial effect. This work demonstrates that corridor effectiveness is
dependent on the species and landscape in question, and that it is
important to understand the mechanisms by which corridors function. (c)
2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
connectivity
Conservation
Dispersal
fragmented landscapes
habitat
Extinction
Soil
Species richness
Interpatch movements
Oribatid
mites