In search of greener pastures: Using satellite images to predict the effects of environmental change on zebra migration
Authored by Stephen Harris, Hattie L A Bartlam-Brooks, Pieter S A Beck, Gil Bohrer
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1002/jgrg.20096
Sponsors:
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Leverhulme Trust
Dulverton Trust
Wilderness Trust
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Historically, ungulate migrations occurred in most grassland and boreal
woodland ecosystems, but many have been lost due to increasing habitat
loss and fragmentation. With the rate of environmental change
increasing, identifying and prioritizing migration routes for
conservation has taken on a new urgency. Understanding the cues that
drive long-distance animal movements is critical to predicting the fate
of migrations under different environmental change scenarios and how
large migratory herbivores will respond to increasing resource
heterogeneity and anthropogenic influences. We used an individual-based
modeling approach to investigate the influence of environmental
conditions, monitored using satellite data, on departure date and
movement speed of migrating zebras in Botswana. Daily zebra movements
between dry and rainy season ranges were annotated with coincident
observations of precipitation from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring
Mission data set and Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer-derived normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI).
An array of increasingly complex movement models representing
alternative hypotheses regarding the environmental cues and controls for
movement was parameterized and tested. The best and most justified model
predicted daily zebra movement as two linear functions of precipitation
rate and NDVI and included a modeled departure date as a function of
cumulative precipitation. The model was highly successful at replicating
both the timing and pace of seven actual migrations observed using GPS
telemetry (R-2=0.914). It shows how zebras rapidly adjust their movement
to changing environmental conditions during migration and are able to
reverse migration to avoid adverse conditions or exploit renewed
resource availability, a nomadic behavior which should lend them a
degree of resilience to climate and environmental change. Our results
demonstrate how competing individual-based migration models, informed by
freely available satellite data, can be used to evaluate the weight of
evidence for multiple hypotheses regarding the use of environmental cues
in animal movement. This modeling framework can be applied to quantify
how animals adapt the timing and pace of their movements to prevailing
environmental conditions and to forecast migrations in near real time or
under alternative environmental scenarios.
Tags
Habitat quality
ecology
patterns
Climate-change
Variability
Vegetation
Rainfall
Botswana
Serengeti
Ungulate