Pelletier David, Clark Melissa, Anderson Mark G, Rayfield Bronwyn, Wulder Michael A, Cardille Jeffrey A
Department of Natural Resource Sciences and McGill School of Environment, McGill University, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Québec, Canada.
The Nature Conservancy, Eastern Resource Office, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 30;9(1):e84135. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0084135. eCollection 2014.
Connectivity models are useful tools that improve the ability of researchers and managers to plan land use for conservation and preservation. Most connectivity models function in a point-to-point or patch-to-patch fashion, limiting their use for assessing connectivity over very large areas. In large or highly fragmented systems, there may be so many habitat patches of interest that assessing connectivity among all possible combinations is prohibitive. To overcome these conceptual and practical limitations, we hypothesized that minor adaptation of the Circuitscape model can allow the creation of omnidirectional connectivity maps illustrating flow paths and variations in the ease of travel across a large study area. We tested this hypothesis in a 24,300 km(2) study area centered on the Montérégie region near Montréal, Québec. We executed the circuit model in overlapping tiles covering the study region. Current was passed across the surface of each tile in orthogonal directions, and then the tiles were reassembled to create directional and omnidirectional maps of connectivity. The resulting mosaics provide a continuous view of connectivity in the entire study area at the full original resolution. We quantified differences between mosaics created using different tile and buffer sizes and developed a measure of the prominence of seams in mosaics formed with this approach. The mosaics clearly show variations in current flow driven by subtle aspects of landscape composition and configuration. Shown prominently in mosaics are pinch points, narrow corridors where organisms appear to be required to traverse when moving through the landscape. Using modest computational resources, these continuous, fine-scale maps of nearly unlimited size allow the identification of movement paths and barriers that affect connectivity. This effort develops a powerful new application of circuit models by pinpointing areas of importance for conservation, broadening the potential for addressing intriguing questions about resource use, animal distribution, and movement.
连通性模型是有用的工具,可提高研究人员和管理人员规划土地用于保护和保存的能力。大多数连通性模型以点对点或斑块对斑块的方式运行,限制了它们在评估非常大区域的连通性方面的应用。在大型或高度破碎的系统中,可能存在如此多感兴趣的栖息地斑块,以至于评估所有可能组合之间的连通性是令人望而却步的。为了克服这些概念和实际限制,我们假设对Circuitscape模型进行微小调整可以创建全向连通性地图,说明在一个大型研究区域内的流动路径和通行难易程度的变化。我们在魁北克省蒙特利尔附近的蒙特雷吉地区为中心的24,300平方公里的研究区域中测试了这一假设。我们在覆盖研究区域的重叠图块中执行电路模型。电流在每个图块的表面沿正交方向通过,然后将图块重新组合以创建连通性的方向图和全向图。生成的镶嵌图以原始全分辨率提供了整个研究区域连通性的连续视图。我们量化了使用不同图块和缓冲区大小创建的镶嵌图之间的差异,并开发了一种衡量用这种方法形成的镶嵌图中接缝突出程度的方法。镶嵌图清楚地显示了由景观组成和配置的细微方面驱动的电流变化。镶嵌图中突出显示的是狭窄点,即生物体在穿越景观时似乎需要经过的狭窄走廊。使用适度的计算资源,这些几乎无限大小的连续、精细尺度地图可以识别影响连通性的移动路径和障碍。这项工作通过确定保护的重要区域,开发了电路模型的一个强大新应用,拓宽了解决有关资源利用、动物分布和移动等有趣问题的潜力。