Rabbit Population Landscape-Scale Simulation to Investigate the Relevance of Using Rabbits in Regulatory Environmental Risk Assessment
Authored by Christopher J Topping, Gabriel S Weyman
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10666-017-9581-3
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://gitlab.com/ChrisTopping/ALMaSS_all
Abstract
This paper describes the development and testing of the ALMaSS rabbit
model and its baseline, and subsequently its application to the question
of lagomorph population vulnerability in environmental risk assessment
(ERA). Development and testing following a pattern-oriented modelling
protocol resulted in a model able to replicate local and landscape-level
rabbit population patterns. We then tested how robust rabbit populations
are to an (imaginary) extreme toxic stressor at a landscape level in a
variety of landscapes, and to what extremes key uncertain model
parameters must be pushed to cause extinctions. This was contrasted with
the same (imaginary) toxic stressor applied to the already existing
ALMaSS hare model. For EU risk assessment of plant protection products,
these results clearly indicate that if the protection goal is
population-level impacts, either in abundance and/or distribution, then
the hare is a much more vulnerable species than the rabbit under all the
conditions tested. Rabbits would only be more vulnerable than hares if
the entire population were to be exposed simultaneously, when lower body
mass would then be a critical factor. This did not occur even though the
toxicant and exposure scenarios tested here were extreme and, in
fragmented landscapes at scales used here, will not occur in reality
from the use of plant protection products on crop fields. As well as
specifically answering the question on rabbit versus hare vulnerability,
this study generally illustrates the potential application of models for
setting focal species for risk assessments.
Tags
Agent-based model
individual-based models
Management
ALMaSS
Lepus europaeus
long-term
Southern england
Abundance
Reproductive-performance
Oryctolagus cuniculus
European hare
Landscape context
Oryctolagus-cuniculus l
Hares lepus-europaeus
European wild rabbit
Litter
size