Aurambout J P, Endress A G, Deal B M
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, 1101 West Peabody Drive, Urbana, IL, U.S.A.
Environ Monit Assess. 2005 Oct;109(1-3):199-225. doi: 10.1007/s10661-005-6266-1.
The increasing use of the landscape by humans has led to important diminutions of natural surfaces. The remaining patches of wild habitat are small and isolated from each other among a matrix of inhospitable land-uses. This habitat fragmentation, by disabling population movements and stopping their spread to new habitats, is a major threat to the survival of numerous plant and animal species. We developed a general model, adaptable for specific species, capable of identifying suitable habitat patches within fragmented landscapes and investigating the capacity of populations to move between these patches. This approach combines GIS analysis of a landscape, with spatial dynamic modeling. Suitable habitat is identified using a threshold area to perimeter ratio. Potential movement pathways of species between habitat patches are modeled using a cellular automaton. Habitat connectivity is estimated by overlaying habitat patches with movement pathways. The maximum potential population is calculated within and between connected habitat patches and potential risk of inbreeding within meta-populations is considered. The model was tested on a sample map and applied to scenario maps of predicted land-use change in the Peoria Tri-county region (IL). It (1) showed area of natural area alone was insufficient to estimate the consequences on animal populations; (2) underscored the necessity to use approaches investigating the effect of land-use change spatially through the landscape and the importance of considering species-specific life history characteristics; and (3) highlighted the model's potential utility as an indicator of species likelihood to be affected negatively by land-use scenarios and therefore requiring detailed investigation.
人类对景观的利用日益增加,导致自然地表大幅减少。剩余的野生栖息地斑块面积小,且在一片不适宜居住的土地利用矩阵中彼此孤立。这种栖息地破碎化,通过阻碍种群迁移并阻止其扩散到新的栖息地,对众多动植物物种的生存构成了重大威胁。我们开发了一个通用模型,适用于特定物种,能够在破碎景观中识别适宜的栖息地斑块,并研究种群在这些斑块之间迁移的能力。这种方法将景观的地理信息系统(GIS)分析与空间动态建模相结合。利用面积与周长比的阈值来识别适宜栖息地。使用元胞自动机对物种在栖息地斑块之间的潜在迁移路径进行建模。通过将栖息地斑块与迁移路径叠加来估计栖息地连通性。计算连通栖息地斑块内部和之间的最大潜在种群数量,并考虑集合种群内近亲繁殖的潜在风险。该模型在一张样本地图上进行了测试,并应用于伊利诺伊州皮奥里亚三县地区预测土地利用变化的情景地图。它(1)表明仅自然区域的面积不足以估计对动物种群的影响;(2)强调了使用通过景观在空间上研究土地利用变化影响的方法的必要性,以及考虑物种特定生活史特征的重要性;(3)突出了该模型作为一种指标的潜在效用,可用于指示物种受土地利用情景负面影响的可能性,因此需要进行详细调查。