Department of Environmental Science and Management, Humboldt State University, 1 Harpst St. Arcata, CA, United States of America.
US Fish and Wildlife Service, Western Golden Eagle Conservation, U.S Fish and Wildlife Service, Corvallis, OR, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jan 14;14(1):e0210643. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210643. eCollection 2019.
The northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) was listed as threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) in 1990. We applied modern spatial conservation theory and models to evaluate several candidate critical habitat networks, and sought an efficient conservation solution that encompassed the highest value lands for spotted owl recovery rather than maximizing the total area of potential critical habitat. We created a map of relative habitat suitability, which served as input to the spatial conservation prioritization program Zonation. We used the spatially-explicit individual-based population model HexSim to estimate and compare simulated spotted owl population outcomes among a suite of candidate critical habitat networks that varied in size and spatial arrangement under alternative scenarios of future habitat suitability and barred owl (S. varia) effects. We evaluated simulated spotted owl population outcomes, including total population size, and extinction and quasi-extinction likelihoods for 108 combinations of candidate critical habitat networks by habitat change by barred owl scenarios, both range-wide and within 11 distinct portions of the owl's range. Barred owl encounter rates and the amount and suitability of habitat had substantial effects on simulated spotted owl populations. When barred owl encounter rates were high, changes in the amount and suitability of habitat had minimal impacts on population performance. Under lowered barred owl encounter rates, candidate critical habitat networks that included most existing high suitability habitat supported a high likelihood of long-term population persistence. Barred owls are currently the primary driving force behind poor population performance of NSOs; however, our models demonstrated that a sufficient area of high suitability habitat remains essential for recovery when effects of barred owls can be reduced. The modeling approach we employed is sufficiently flexible to incorporate new information about spotted owls as it becomes available and could likely be applied to conservation planning for other species.
北方斑点猫头鹰(Strix occidentalis caurina)于 1990 年被列入美国濒危物种法案(ESA)的受威胁物种名单。我们应用现代空间保护理论和模型来评估几个候选关键栖息地网络,并寻求一种有效的保护解决方案,该方案涵盖了对斑点猫头鹰恢复最有价值的土地,而不是最大化潜在关键栖息地的总面积。我们创建了一个相对栖息地适宜性地图,作为空间保护优先级规划程序 Zonation 的输入。我们使用基于个体的空间明确种群模型 HexSim 来估计和比较在未来栖息地适宜性和条纹猫头鹰(S. varia)效应的替代情景下,大小和空间排列不同的一系列候选关键栖息地网络中模拟的斑点猫头鹰种群结果。我们评估了模拟的斑点猫头鹰种群结果,包括总种群规模,以及在 108 种候选关键栖息地网络组合中由于条纹猫头鹰情景引起的栖息地变化而导致的灭绝和准灭绝可能性,包括整个范围和猫头鹰范围的 11 个不同部分。条纹猫头鹰遭遇率和栖息地的数量和适宜性对模拟的斑点猫头鹰种群有很大的影响。当条纹猫头鹰遭遇率较高时,栖息地数量和适宜性的变化对种群表现的影响最小。在条纹猫头鹰遭遇率降低的情况下,包括大多数现有高适宜性栖息地的候选关键栖息地网络支持长期种群生存的可能性很高。条纹猫头鹰目前是北方斑点猫头鹰种群表现不佳的主要驱动力;然而,我们的模型表明,当条纹猫头鹰的影响可以降低时,仍然需要足够的高适宜性栖息地面积来实现恢复。我们采用的建模方法具有足够的灵活性,可以在获得有关斑点猫头鹰的新信息时进行整合,并且可能适用于其他物种的保护规划。