Herbert Sarah M, Tomscha Stephanie A, Lai Hao Ran, Benavidez Rubianca, Balkwill Colan G, Ruston Pearl R, Jackson Bethanna, Deslippe Julie R
Centre for Biodiversity and Restoration Ecology and School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Bioprotection Aotearoa Centre of Research Excellence, New Zealand.
Conserv Biol. 2025 Jun 30:e70088. doi: 10.1111/cobi.70088.
Identifying refugia from emerging threats is vital to ensure the persistence of rare and threatened species, but modeling habitat distribution for these species is challenging and the role of people in refuge management is rarely considered. Myrtle rust is an emerging infectious disease that represents a grave threat to the rare wetland tree species maire tawake (Syzygium maire) in Aotearoa New Zealand. We combined high-resolution hydrological modeling with integrated species distribution modeling of new and existing S. maire records to identify the extent of habitat in the capital city region available for conservation management. We mapped 2 myrtle rust infection risk scenarios throughout the region to identify areas of relatively low disease risk and used distance of S. maire habitat to the nearest road as a proxy for human accessibility to the area. We identified 1230 km of S. maire habitat (waterlogged areas) in the region. In these areas, 1-52 km were the most feasible for conservation because they were predicted to support high relative abundances of S. maire, were accessible by road, and offered lower disease risk. However, protecting trees only in low-risk or accessible refugia was predicted by the species distribution model (SDM) to be insufficient to maintain the regional population as the myrtle rust pandemic proceeds. Our highly local approach to refugia modeling enabled rapid collection of new records of a rare species for species distribution modeling and access to high-resolution topographical data for hydrological modeling. However, limitations to understanding the biophysical limits of myrtle rust and S. maire included model-based constraints on inference, poor spatial precision of historical species records, insufficient information on groundwater drainage, and uncertainty in quantifying disease risk. The success of regional conservation efforts for this species will likely depend on human intervention to increase S. maire occupancy in low-risk habitats and to manage myrtle rust. We therefore recommend leveraging human-nature interactions in areas to create, expand, and protect habitat for rare species in a rapidly changing world.
识别新兴威胁下的避难所对于确保珍稀濒危物种的存续至关重要,但为这些物种建立栖息地分布模型具有挑战性,而且人们在避难所管理中的作用很少被考虑。桃金娘锈病是一种新出现的传染病,对新西兰奥特亚罗瓦地区珍稀的湿地树种马雷塔瓦克(多核蒲桃)构成严重威胁。我们将高分辨率水文模型与新的和现有的多核蒲桃记录的综合物种分布模型相结合,以确定首都城市地区可供保护管理的栖息地范围。我们绘制了整个地区的两种桃金娘锈病感染风险情景图,以识别疾病风险相对较低的区域,并将多核蒲桃栖息地到最近道路的距离作为人类进入该区域的替代指标。我们在该地区识别出了1230公里的多核蒲桃栖息地(涝渍区)。在这些区域中,1至52公里的区域对于保护最为可行,因为预计它们能支持较高相对丰度的多核蒲桃,可通过道路到达,且疾病风险较低。然而,随着桃金娘锈病大流行的发展,物种分布模型预测仅在低风险或易到达的避难所保护树木不足以维持区域种群数量。我们针对避难所建模的高度本地化方法能够快速收集珍稀物种的新记录用于物种分布建模,并获取高分辨率地形数据用于水文建模。然而,在理解桃金娘锈病和多核蒲桃的生物物理极限方面存在局限性,包括基于模型的推断约束、历史物种记录的空间精度差、关于地下水排水的信息不足以及量化疾病风险的不确定性。该物种区域保护工作的成功可能取决于人类干预,以增加多核蒲桃在低风险栖息地的占有率并管理桃金娘锈病。因此,我们建议在各地区利用人与自然的相互作用,在快速变化的世界中为珍稀物种创造、扩大和保护栖息地。