Compensatory conservation measures for an endangered caribou population under climate change
Authored by Sarah Bauduin, Eliot McIntire, Martin-Hugues St-Laurent, Steven G Cumming
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-34822-9
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/PredictiveEcology/SpaDES-modules/tree/master/modules/caribou2Movements
Abstract
Future human land use and climate change may disrupt movement behaviors
of terrestrial animals, thereby altering the ability of individuals to
move across a landscape. Some of the expected changes result from
processes whose effects will be difficult to alter, such as global
climate change. We present a novel framework in which we use models to
(1) identify the ecological changes from these difficult-to-alter
processes, as well as (2) the potential conservation measures that are
best able to compensate for these changes. We illustrated this framework
with the case of an endangered caribou population in Quebec, Canada. We
coupled a spatially explicit individual-based movement model with a
range of landscape scenarios to assess the impacts of varying degrees of
climate change, and the ability of conservation actions to compensate
for such impacts on caribou movement behaviors. We found that (1)
climate change impacts reduced movement potential, and that (2) the
complete restoration of secondary roads inside protected areas was able
to fully offset this reduction, suggesting that road restoration would
be an effective compensatory conservation action. By evaluating
conservation actions via landscape use simulated by an individual-based
model, we were able to identify compensatory conservation options for an
endangered species facing climate change.
Tags
connectivity
movement
Roads
ecology
fragmented landscapes
Canada
Habitat selection
Woodland caribou
Restoration
Protected
areas