Movement effects on equilibrium distributions of habitat generalists in heterogeneous landscapes
Authored by L Westerberg, O Ostman, U Wennergren
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2005.02.004
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The effect of landscape heterogeneity on population distribution and
persistence has been well investigated for habitat specialists, but the
response of habitat generalist to landscape heterogeneity is less well
known. We used a matrix model for an agricultural habitat generalist
carabid (Pterostichus cupreus (L.)) on a lattice landscape, to study the
effect of changing landscape composition and configuration on the within
generation equilibrium (asymptotic) population distribution. Movements
were approximated from diffusion functions that depended on habitat
quality only. The population distribution of P cupreus was sensitive to
both habitat composition and configuration. Habitat configuration
generally explained more variation in the population distribution
relative the resources, but the changes in amount of preferred habitat
had a larger effect at low amounts of preferred habitat. The resource
use of R cupreus was less sensitive when there was low contrast between
habitat qualities. Numerical solutions indicated that the stable
population distribution is usually reached within a generation, and the
analytical results from our equilibrium model are thus reasonable
approximations. The (transient) time to reach equilibrium population
distribution was lower in landscapes where preferred habitat was scarce
and scattered, and there was a trade-off between transient time and the
population distribution relative to the resources. We found no clear
threshold effects, only a gradually steeper decline in resource use as
preferred resources were randomly lost in high contrast landscapes.
Overall, the results were congruent with other results on generalists
where demography and density dependent processes have been included, which indicate that movement alone is a driving force. (c) 2005 Elsevier
B.V All rights reserved.
Tags
Spatially explicit
fragmented landscapes
Fractal landscapes
Explicit population-models
Animal
movement
Individual-based
models
Extinction thresholds
Inhabiting cereal fields
Patch isolation metrics
Carabid beetles