What you see is where you go? Modeling dispersal in mountainous landscapes
Authored by Volker Grimm, Stephanie Kramer-Schadt, Nestor Fernandez, Roland F Graf
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-006-9073-3
Sponsors:
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
UFZ-Centre for Environmental Research
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Inter-patch connectivity can be strongly influenced by topography and
matrix heterogeneity, particularly when dealing with species with high
cognitive abilities. To estimate dispersal in such systems, simulation
models need to incorporate a behavioral component of matrix effects to
result in more realistic connectivity measures. Inter-patch dispersal is
important for the persistence of capercaillie (Tetrao urogallus) in
central Europe, where this endangered grouse species lives in patchy
populations embedded in a mountainous landscape. We simulated
capercaillie movements with an individual-based, spatially explicit
dispersal model (IBM) and compared the resulting connectivity measure
with distance and an expert estimation. We used a landscape comprising
discrete habitat patches, temporary habitat, non-habitat forests, and
non-habitat open land. First, we assumed that dispersing individuals
have perfect knowledge of habitat cells within the perceptual range
(null model). Then, we included constraints to perception and
accessibility, i.e., mountain chains, open area and valleys (three
sub-models). In a full model, all sub-models were included at once.
Correlations between the different connectivity measures were high
(Spearman's rho > 0.7) and connectivity based on the full IBM was closer
to expert estimation than distance. For selected cases, simple distance
differed strongly from the full IBM measure and the expert estimation.
Connectivity based on the IBM was strongly sensitive to the size of
perceptual range with higher sensitivity for the null model compared to
the full model that included context dependent perceptual ranges. Our
heuristic approach is adequate for simulating movements of species with
high cognitive abilities in strongly structured landscapes that
influence perception and permeability.
Tags
Viability
movements
fragmented landscapes
habitat
Population-dynamics
Consequences
Heterogeneous
landscapes
Spatial ecology
Capercaillie tetrao-urogallus
Connectivity measures