Department of Biology, University of Louisiana Lafayette, Lafayette, LA, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, Institute of Environment, Florida International University, North Miami, FL, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2022 Feb;91(2):381-390. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13637. Epub 2021 Nov 24.
Energetic resources and habitat distribution are inherently linked. Energetic resource availability is a major driver of the distribution of consumers, but estimating how much specific habitats contribute to the energetic resource needs of a consumer can be problematic. We present a new approach that combines remote sensing information and stable isotope ecology to produce maps of energetic resources (E-scapes). E-scapes project species-specific resource use information onto the landscape to classify areas based on energetic importance. Using our E-scapes, we investigated the relationship between energetic resource distribution and white shrimp distribution and how the scale used to generate the E-scape mediated this relationship. E-scapes successfully predicted the size, abundance, biomass, and total energy of a consumer in salt marsh habitats in coastal Louisiana, USA at scales relevant to the movement of the consumer. Our E-scape maps can be used alone or in combination with existing models to improve habitat management and restoration practices and have potential to be used to test fundamental movement theory.
能量资源和栖息地分布是内在相关的。能量资源的可获得性是消费者分布的主要驱动因素,但估计特定栖息地对消费者的能量资源需求有多大可能会有问题。我们提出了一种新的方法,将遥感信息和稳定同位素生态学结合起来,生成能量资源的地图(E-scape)。E-scape 将特定物种的资源利用信息投射到景观上,根据能量重要性对区域进行分类。使用我们的 E-scape,我们研究了能量资源分布与白虾分布之间的关系,以及生成 E-scape 的比例如何调节这种关系。E-scape 在美国路易斯安那州沿海盐沼生境中成功预测了消费者的大小、丰度、生物量和总能量,其比例与消费者的运动相关。我们的 E-scape 地图可单独使用或与现有模型结合使用,以改善栖息地管理和恢复实践,并有可能用于测试基本的运动理论。