Using dynamic population simulations to extend resource selection analyses and prioritize habitats for conservation
Authored by Nathan H Schumaker, Julie A Heinrichs, Cameron L Aldridge, Michael S O'Donnell
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmode1.2017.05.017
Sponsors:
United States Geological Survey (USGS)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Prioritizing habitats for conservation is a challenging task,
particularly for species with fluctuating populations and seasonally
dynamic habitat needs. Although the use of resource selection models to
identify and prioritize habitat for conservation is increasingly common,
their ability to characterize important long-term habitats for dynamic
populations are variable. To examine how habitats might be prioritized
differently if resource selection was directly and dynamically linked
with population fluctuations and movement limitations among seasonal
habitats, we constructed a spatially explicit individual-based model for
a dramatically fluctuating population requiring temporally varying
resources. Using greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) in
Wyoming as a case study, we used resource selection function maps to
guide seasonal movement and habitat selection, but emergent population
dynamics and simulated movement limitations modified long-term habitat
occupancy. We compared priority habitats in RSF maps to long-term
simulated habitat use. We examined the circumstances under which the
explicit consideration of movement limitations, in combination with
population fluctuations and trends, are likely to alter predictions of
important habitats. In doing so, we assessed the future occupancy of
protected areas under alternative population and habitat conditions.
Habitat prioritizations based on resource selection models alone
predicted high use in isolated parcels of habitat and in areas with low
connectivity among seasonal habitats. In contrast, results based on more
biologically-informed simulations emphasized central and connected areas
near high-density populations, sometimes predicted to be low selection
value. Dynamic models of habitat use can provide additional biological
realism that can extend, and in some cases, contradict habitat use
predictions generated from short-term or static resource selection
analyses. The explicit inclusion of population dynamics and movement
propensities via spatial simulation modeling frameworks may provide an
informative means of predicting long-term habitat use, particularly for
fluctuating populations with complex seasonal habitat needs.
Importantly, our results indicate the possible need to consider habitat
selection models as a starting point rather than the common end point
for refining and prioritizing habitats for protection for cyclic and
highly variable populations. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Individual-based model
models
protected areas
patterns
scale
Quality
North-america
Landscapes
Persistence
Abundance
West-nile-virus
Greater sage-grouse
Habitat prioritization
Habitat selection model
Resource selection function