Gaines William L, Lyons Andrea L, Suring Lowell H, Hughes Carol S
Washington Conservation Science Institute, Leavenworth, WA 98826, USA.
Northern Ecologic L.L.C., Suring, WI 54174, USA.
Animals (Basel). 2023 Mar 25;13(7):1166. doi: 10.3390/ani13071166.
We evaluated ecosystem conditions known to influence the viability of a strictly arboreal species (the red tree vole, ) endemic and historically distributed in the forests across the Coast Range, Cascades, and Klamath Mountains ecoregions in the Western United States of America. We found widespread reductions in ecosystem conditions needed to support the long-term viability of the red tree vole. This was particularly evident in the Coast Range where the weighted watershed index (WWI) was 26% of its historical value, and the current probability of maintaining viability departed the most from historical viability probabilities in ecoregions that were evaluated. In contrast, in the Cascades and Klamath Mountains, the WWI was 42% and 52% of their respective historical values, and the current probabilities of maintaining viability departed less from historical conditions than in the Coast Range. Habitat loss from timber harvest represented the most immediate threat in the Coast Range, while habitat loss from wildfires represented the most risk to the red tree vole in the Cascades and Klamath Mountains. Reducing the risks to the viability of the red tree vole will depend largely on the implementation of conservation practices designed to protect remaining habitat and restore degraded ecosystems in the Coast Range. However, the risk of large, high-severity wildfires will require the protection and increased resilience of existing ecosystems. Our results indicate that considerable adaptation to climate change will be required to conserve the red tree vole in the long term. Conservation may be accomplished by revising land and resource management plans to include standards and guidelines relevant to red tree vole management and persistence, the identification of priority areas for conservation and restoration, and in assessing how management alternatives influence ecosystem resiliency and red tree vole viability.
我们评估了已知会影响一种严格树栖物种(红树田鼠)生存能力的生态系统状况。该物种为美国西部特有,历史上分布于海岸山脉、喀斯喀特山脉和克拉马斯山脉生态区的森林中。我们发现,支持红树田鼠长期生存所需的生态系统状况普遍下降。这在海岸山脉尤为明显,那里的加权流域指数(WWI)仅为其历史值的26%,在评估的生态区中,当前维持生存能力的概率与历史生存概率的偏差最大。相比之下,在喀斯喀特山脉和克拉马斯山脉,WWI分别为其各自历史值的42%和52%,当前维持生存能力的概率与历史状况的偏差小于海岸山脉。木材采伐导致的栖息地丧失是海岸山脉最直接的威胁,而野火导致的栖息地丧失对喀斯喀特山脉和克拉马斯山脉的红树田鼠构成的风险最大。降低红树田鼠生存能力面临的风险很大程度上取决于实施旨在保护剩余栖息地和恢复海岸山脉退化生态系统的保护措施。然而,大规模、高强度野火的风险需要保护现有生态系统并提高其恢复力。我们的结果表明,从长远来看,保护红树田鼠需要对气候变化进行相当程度的适应。可以通过修订土地和资源管理计划来实现保护,这些计划应包括与红树田鼠管理和生存相关的标准和指南、确定保护和恢复的优先区域,以及评估管理方案如何影响生态系统恢复力和红树田鼠的生存能力。