Fragmented landscapes, road mortality and patch connectivity: modelling influences on the dispersal of Eurasian lynx
Authored by E Revilla, Thorsten Wiegand, S Kramer-Schadt, U Breitenmoser
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1111/j.0021-8901.2004.00933.x
Sponsors:
European Union
Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. Although many reintroduction schemes for the Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx
in Germany have been discussed, the implications of connectivity between
suitable patches have not been assessed.
2. We introduce an individual-based, spatially explicit dispersal model
to assess the probability of a dispersing animal reaching another
suitable patch in the complex heterogeneous German landscape, with its
dense transport system. The dispersal model was calibrated using
telemetric data from the Swiss Jura and based on a map of potential lynx
dispersal habitat.
3. Most suitable patches could be interconnected by movements of
dispersing lynx within 10 years of reintroduction. However, when
realistic levels of mortality risks on roads were applied, most patches
become isolated except along the German-Czech border. Consequently, patch connectivity is limited not so much by the distribution of
dispersal habitat but by the high mortality of dispersing lynx.
Accordingly, rather than solely investing in habitat restoration, management efforts should try to reduce road mortality.
4. Synthesis and applications. Our approach illustrates how spatially
explicit dispersal models can guide conservation efforts and
reintroduction programmes even where data are scarce. Clear limits
imposed by substantial road mortality will affect dispersing lynx as
well as other large carnivores, unless offset by careful road-crossing
management or by the careful selection of release points in
reintroduction programmes.
Tags
Management
Habitat fragmentation
Conservation
pattern
Metapopulation dynamics
Corridors
Population viability analysis
Iberian lynx
Primeval forest poland
Mountains