Assessing the landscape functional connectivity using movement maps: a case study with endemic Azorean insects
Authored by Fernando Ascensao, Bruno A Aparicio, Jose Cascalho, Maria J Cruz, Paulo A V Borges, Eduardo B Azevedo, Rui B Elias
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10841-018-0059-7
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
There is a vast body of literature aiming to predict, for a large number
of taxa, the spatial distribution of suitable areas given the expected
future changes of climatic conditions. However, such studies often
overlook the role of landscape functional connectivity. This is
particularly relevant for species with low vagility, as ground-dwelling
insects, inhabiting areas with high human pressure due to habitat
destruction and fragmentation, namely in the islands. In this study, we
developed an individual-based model (IBM) that simulates individual
movement according to landscape resistance and mortality probability, in
order to derive the landscape movement map, and applied it to five
endemic ground-dwelling insects of Terceira Island (Azores). We then
confronted the movement maps of each species against the species
distribution models previously developed for both current and future
climatic conditions, quantifying the amount of important movement areas
that are enclosed by the distribution polygons. We further sought to
identify where habitat restoration would increase the overall
connectivity among large habitat patches. Our results showed that, for
both timeframes, the distribution models enclosed small amounts of areas
predicted to be important for animal movement. Additionally, we
predicted strong reductions (up to 94\%) of these important areas for
functional connectivity. We also identified areas in-between native
forest of primary importance for restoration that may significantly
increase the probability of persistence of our model species. We
anticipate that this study will be useful to both conservation planners
and ecologists seeking to understand species movement and dispersal both
is islands and elsewhere.
Tags
Individual-based model
Biodiversity
Land-use
Conservation
landscape management
Model
habitat
Climate-change
Sea-level rise
Patchy landscapes
Climate change adaptation
Island ecology
Azores
Oceanic islands
Dung
beetle