Cattarino Lorenzo, McAlpine Clive A, Rhodes Jonathan R
Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Nathan, Qld, 4111, Australia.
Landscape Ecology and Conservation Group, School of Geography, Planning and Environmental Management, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, 4072, Australia.
J Anim Ecol. 2016 Jan;85(1):168-77. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12427. Epub 2015 Sep 14.
Habitat fragmentation, that is the breaking apart of habitat, can occur at multiple spatial scales at the same time, as a result of different land uses. Individuals of most species spend different amounts of times moving in different modes, during which they cover different distances and experience different fitness impacts. The scale at which fragmentation occurs interacts with the distance that individuals move in a particular mode to affect an individual's ability to find habitat. However, there is little knowledge of the fitness consequences of different scales of fragmentation for individuals with different traits of movement behaviour. This is critical to understand the mechanisms of persistence of different species in fragmented landscapes. The aim of this study was to quantify the impacts of habitat fragmentation at different scales on the fitness components (reproduction and survival) of individuals with different traits of movement behaviour. We developed a demographic model of individuals that adopt short and tortuous movements within foraging areas (foraging mode) and long and straight movements between foraging areas (searching mode). We considered individuals that adopt different movement modes with varying frequencies, inherently move different searching distances and experience different risks of mortality during searching. We then applied the model within a spatially explicit simulation framework where we varied simultaneously the degree of fragmentation within (fine scale) and between foraging areas (coarse scale). Fine-scale fragmentation had a greater impact on reproduction and survival than coarse-scale fragmentation, for those individuals with a low searching propensity. The impact of fine-scale fragmentation on reproduction and survival interacted with the impact of coarse-scale fragmentation on reproduction and survival, to affect the fitness of individuals with a high searching propensity, large inherent searching distances and high searching mortality rates. Habitat selection strongly mitigated the impact of the scale at which fragmentation occurred on individual fitness. Our findings suggest that the land use to target with conservation actions to reduce fragmentation, such as financial schemes that promote re-vegetation or retention of standing vegetation, depends on the scale at which fragmentation occurs and the movement behaviour traits of the species of conservation concern.
栖息地破碎化,即栖息地的分裂,可能由于不同的土地利用方式同时在多个空间尺度上发生。大多数物种的个体以不同的方式移动不同的时间,在此期间它们覆盖不同的距离并经历不同的适合度影响。破碎化发生的尺度与个体以特定方式移动的距离相互作用,从而影响个体寻找栖息地的能力。然而,对于具有不同运动行为特征的个体,不同尺度破碎化对适合度的影响知之甚少。这对于理解不同物种在破碎景观中持续存在的机制至关重要。本研究的目的是量化不同尺度的栖息地破碎化对具有不同运动行为特征个体的适合度组成部分(繁殖和生存)的影响。我们开发了一个个体的种群统计学模型,这些个体在觅食区域内采用短而曲折的移动方式(觅食模式),在觅食区域之间采用长而直的移动方式(搜索模式)。我们考虑了以不同频率采用不同移动模式、天生移动不同搜索距离且在搜索过程中经历不同死亡风险的个体。然后,我们在一个空间明确的模拟框架内应用该模型,在该框架中我们同时改变觅食区域内(精细尺度)和觅食区域之间(粗尺度)的破碎化程度。对于那些搜索倾向较低的个体,精细尺度破碎化对繁殖和生存的影响大于粗尺度破碎化。精细尺度破碎化对繁殖和生存的影响与粗尺度破碎化对繁殖和生存的影响相互作用,从而影响具有高搜索倾向、大的天生搜索距离和高搜索死亡率的个体的适合度。栖息地选择强烈减轻了破碎化发生尺度对个体适合度的影响。我们的研究结果表明,为减少破碎化而采取保护行动所针对的土地利用方式,例如促进重新植被或保留现存植被的财政计划,取决于破碎化发生的尺度以及受保护物种的运动行为特征。