Modelling space use and dispersal of mammals in real landscapes: a tool for conservation
Authored by DW Macdonald, S Rushton
Date Published: 2003
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Abstract
Aim To explore the usefulness of Spatially Explicit Population Models
(SEPMs), incorporating dispersal, as tools for animal conservation, as
illustrated by the contrasting cases of four British mammals.
Methods For each of the four species (American mink, Mustela vison, pine
marten, Martes martes, dormouse, Muscardinus avellanarius and water
vole, Arvicola terrestris) a spatial dynamics model was developed based
on an integrated geographical information system (GIS) population model
that linked space use to the incidence of the species. Each model had, first, a GIS, which stored environmental, habitat and animal population
information, and secondly, an individual-based population dynamics
module, which simulated home range formation, individual life histories
and dispersal within the GIS-held landscape.
Results The four models illustrated different interactions between
species life-history variables and the landscape, particularly with
respect to dispersal. As water voles and dormice occupy home ranges that
are small relative to blocks of their habitat, they were most
effectively modelled in terms of the dynamics of local populations
within habitat blocks but linked by dispersal. In contrast, because the
home ranges of American mink and pine marten are large relative to
blocks of habitat, they were best modelled as individuals moving through
a landscape of more or less useful patches of habitat. For the water
vole, the most significant predictors of population size were the
carrying capacity of each habitat and the annual number of litters. For
the dormouse, the likelihood of catastrophe and the upper limit to
dispersal movement were the key variables determining persistence. Adult
mortality and home-range size were the only significant partial
correlates of total population size for the American mink. Adult
mortality was also a significant correlate of total population size in
the pine marten, as were litter size and juvenile mortality. In neither
the marten nor the mink was dispersal distance a significant factor in
determining their persistence in the landscape.
Main conclusions At a landscape scale it is difficult to measure animal
distributions directly and yet conservation planning often necessitates
knowledge of where, and in what numbers, animals are found, and how
their distributions will be affected by interventions. SEPMs offer a
useful tool for predicting this, and for refining conservation plans
before irreversible decisions are taken in practice.
Tags
selection
ecology
patterns
habitat
Population viability analysis
Woodland
Dormouse muscardinus-avellanarius
Sciurus-vulgaris l
Squirrel
Red