A multispecies test of source-sink indicators to prioritize habitat for declining populations
Authored by Nathan H Schumaker, Julie A Heinrichs, Joshua J Lawler, Chad B Wilsey, Kira C Monroe, Cameron L Aldridge
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13058
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Abstract
For species at risk of decline or extinction in source-sink systems,
sources are an obvious target for habitat protection actions. However,
the way in which source habitats are identified and prioritized can
reduce the effectiveness of conservation actions. Although sources and
sinks are conceptually defined using both demographic and movement
criteria, simplifications are often required in systems with limited
data. To assess the conservation outcomes of alternative source metrics
and resulting prioritizations, we simulated population dynamics and
extinction risk for 3 endangered species. Using empirically based
habitat population models, we linked habitat maps with measured site- or
habitat-specific demographic conditions, movement abilities, and
behaviors. We calculated source-sink metrics over a range of periods of
data collection and prioritized consistently high-output sources for
conservation. We then tested whether prioritized patches identified the
habitats that most affected persistence by removing them and measuring
the population response. Conservation decisions based on different
source-sink metrics and durations of data collection affected species
persistence. Shorter time series obscured the ability of metrics to
identify influential habitats, particularly in temporally variable and
slowly declining populations. Data-rich source-sink metrics that
included both demography and movement information did not always
identify the habitats with the greatest influence on extinction risk. In
some declining populations, patch abundance better predicted influential
habitats for short-term regional persistence. Because source-sink
metrics (i.e., births minus deaths; births and immigrations minus deaths
and emigration) describe net population conditions and cancel out gross
population counts, they may not adequately identify influential habitats
in declining populations. For many nonequilibrium populations, new
metrics that maintain the counts of individual births, deaths, and
movement may provide additional insight into habitats that most
influence persistence.
Tags
Individual-based model
Dynamics
selection
Conservation
Metapopulation
Density
Biology
Persistence
Abundance
Black-capped vireo
Declining population
Greater sage-grouse
Habitat prioritization
Ord's kangaroo rat
Source-sink dynamics
Source-sink metrics
Alberta