The Effects of Landscape Modifications on the Long-Term Persistence of Animal Populations
Authored by Christopher J Topping, Richard M Sibly, Jacob Nabe-Nielsen, Valery E Forbes, Mads C Forchhammer
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0008932
Sponsors:
Danish Natural Sciences Research Council
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: The effects of landscape modifications on the long-term
persistence of wild animal populations is of crucial importance to
wildlife managers and conservation biologists, but obtaining
experimental evidence using real landscapes is usually impossible. To
circumvent this problem we used individual-based models (IBMs) of
interacting animals in experimental modifications of a real Danish
landscape. The models incorporate as much as possible of the behaviour
and ecology of four species with contrasting life-history
characteristics: skylark (Alauda arvensis), vole (Microtus agrestis), a
ground beetle (Bembidion lampros) and a linyphiid spider (Erigone atra).
This allows us to quantify the population implications of experimental
modifications of landscape configuration and composition.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Starting with a real agricultural
landscape, we progressively reduced landscape complexity by (i)
homogenizing habitat patch shapes, (ii) randomizing the locations of the
patches, and (iii) randomizing the size of the patches. The first two
steps increased landscape fragmentation. We assessed the effects of
these manipulations on the long-term persistence of animal populations
by measuring equilibrium population sizes and time to recovery after
disturbance. Patch rearrangement and the presence of corridors had a
large effect on the population dynamics of species whose local success
depends on the surrounding terrain. Landscape modifications that reduced
population sizes increased recovery times in the short-dispersing
species, making small populations vulnerable to increasing disturbance.
The species that were most strongly affected by large disturbances
fluctuated little in population sizes in years when no perturbations
took place.
Significance: Traditional approaches to the management and conservation
of populations use either classical methods of population analysis, which fail to adequately account for the spatial configurations of
landscapes, or landscape ecology, which accounts for landscape structure
but has difficulty predicting the dynamics of populations living in
them. Here we show how realistic and replicable individual-based models
can bridge the gap between non-spatial population theory and non-dynamic
landscape ecology. A major strength of the approach is its ability to
identify population vulnerabilities not detected by standard population
viability analyses.
Tags
Individual-based model
connectivity
Habitat fragmentation
ecology
pattern
birds
mammals
Life-history
Metapopulation dynamics
Patch size