Spatially and Financially Explicit Population Viability Analysis of Maculinea alcon in The Netherlands
Authored by Viktoriia Radchuk, Nicolas Schtickzelle, Michiel F WallisDeVries
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038684
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
RAMAS GIS
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: The conservation of species structured in metapopulations
involves an important dilemma of resource allocation: should investments
be directed at restoring/enlarging habitat patches or increasing
connectivity. This is still an open question for Maculinea species
despite they are among the best studied and emblematic butterfly
species, because none of the population dynamics models developed so far
included dispersal.
Methodology/Principal Findings: We developed the first spatially and
financially explicit Population Viability Analysis model for Maculinea
alcon, using field data from The Netherlands. Implemented using the
RAMAS/GIS platform, the model incorporated both local (contest density
dependence, environmental and demographic stochasticities), and regional
population dynamics (dispersal rates between habitat patches). We
selected four habitat patch networks, contrasting in several basic
features (number of habitat patches, their quality, connectivity, and
occupancy rate) to test how these features are affecting the ability to
enhance population viability of four basic management options, designed
to incur the same costs: habitat enlargement, habitat quality
improvement, creation of new stepping stone habitat patches, and
reintroduction of captive-reared butterflies. The PVA model was
validated by the close match between its predictions and independent
field observations on the patch occupancy pattern. The four patch
networks differed in their sensitivity to model parameters, as well as
in the ranking of management options. Overall, the best cost-effective
option was enlargement of existing habitat patches, followed by either
habitat quality improvement or creation of stepping stones depending on
the network features. Reintroduction was predicted to generally be
inefficient, except in one specific patch network.
Conclusions/Significance: Our results underline the importance of
spatial and regional aspects (dispersal and connectivity) in determining
the impact of conservation actions, even for a species previously
considered as sedentary. They also illustrate that failure to account
for the cost of management scenarios can lead to very different
conclusions.
Tags
Individual-based model
Habitat quality
Conservation
Sensitivity-analysis
Metapopulation dynamics
Large blue butterflies
Ant
nests
Host-specificity
Social parasite
Myrmica ants