Hovick Torre J, Dahlgren David K, Papeş Monica, Elmore R Dwayne, Pitman James C
School of Natural Resource Sciences-Range Program, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND, United States of America.
Department of Wildland Resources, Utah State University, Logan, UT, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Aug 28;10(8):e0137021. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0137021. eCollection 2015.
The demands of a growing human population dictates that expansion of energy infrastructure, roads, and other development frequently takes place in native rangelands. Particularly, transmission lines and roads commonly divide rural landscapes and increase fragmentation. This has direct and indirect consequences on native wildlife that can be mitigated through thoughtful planning and proactive approaches to identifying areas of high conservation priority. We used nine years (2003-2011) of Greater Prairie-Chicken (Tympanuchus cupido) lek locations totaling 870 unique leks sites in Kansas and seven geographic information system (GIS) layers describing land cover, topography, and anthropogenic structures to model habitat suitability across the state. The models obtained had low omission rates (<0.18) and high area under the curve scores (AUC >0.81), indicating high model performance and reliability of predicted habitat suitability for Greater Prairie-Chickens. We found that elevation was the most influential in predicting lek locations, contributing three times more predictive power than any other variable. However, models were improved by the addition of land cover and anthropogenic features (transmission lines, roads, and oil and gas structures). Overall, our analysis provides a hierarchal understanding of Greater Prairie-Chicken habitat suitability that is broadly based on geomorphological features followed by land cover suitability. We found that when land features and vegetation cover are suitable for Greater Prairie-Chickens, fragmentation by anthropogenic sources such as roadways and transmission lines are a concern. Therefore, it is our recommendation that future human development in Kansas avoid areas that our models identified as highly suitable for Greater Prairie-Chickens and focus development on land cover types that are of lower conservation concern.
不断增长的人口需求决定了能源基础设施、道路及其他开发项目的扩张常常在原生牧场进行。特别是输电线路和道路通常会分割乡村景观并加剧破碎化。这对原生野生动物产生了直接和间接的影响,而通过深思熟虑的规划和积极主动地识别高保护优先级区域的方法,这些影响是可以减轻的。我们利用了九年(2003 - 2011年)间大草原榛鸡(Tympanuchus cupido)求偶场的位置信息,这些信息涵盖了堪萨斯州总共870个独特的求偶场地点,并结合七个描述土地覆盖、地形和人为建筑的地理信息系统(GIS)图层,来模拟全州范围内的栖息地适宜性。所得到的模型遗漏率较低(<0.18),曲线下面积得分较高(AUC>0.81),这表明模型性能良好,且预测的大草原榛鸡栖息地适宜性具有较高的可靠性。我们发现海拔对预测求偶场位置的影响最大,其预测能力比任何其他变量都高出三倍。然而,通过添加土地覆盖和人为特征(输电线路、道路以及油气设施),模型得到了改进。总体而言,我们的分析基于地貌特征,其次是土地覆盖适宜性,对大草原榛鸡栖息地适宜性提供了一个层次分明的理解。我们发现,当土地特征和植被覆盖适合大草原榛鸡时,道路和输电线路等人为来源造成的破碎化就成为一个问题。因此,我们建议堪萨斯州未来的人类开发应避开我们的模型所确定的对大草原榛鸡高度适宜的区域,将开发重点放在保护关注度较低的土地覆盖类型上。