Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit

Rapid development and urbanization of the lower Florida Keys in the last 30 years has fragmented the habitat of the Lower Keys marsh rabbit (Sylvilagus palustris hefneri), hereafter called marsh rabbit, and threatened it with extinction. On the Naval Air Station–Key West (NAS), Boca Chica Key, marsh...

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Main Authors: David H. LaFever, Paige M. Schmidt, Neil D. Perry, Craig A. Faulhaber, Roel R. Lopez, Nova J. Silvy, Elizabeth A. Forys
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utah State University 2017-02-01
Series:Human-Wildlife Interactions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol2/iss2/20
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spelling doaj-3362695c9afe4ece8a20fd6a9401e5972020-11-25T03:47:09ZengUtah State UniversityHuman-Wildlife Interactions2155-38742155-38742017-02-012210.26077/jqbb-qk25Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh RabbitDavid H. LaFever0Paige M. Schmidt1Neil D. Perry2Craig A. Faulhaber3Roel R. Lopez4Nova J. Silvy5Elizabeth A. Forys6Texas A&M UniversityTexas A&M UniversityTexas A&M UniversityUtah State UniversityTexas A&M UniversityTexas A&M UniversityEckerd CollegeRapid development and urbanization of the lower Florida Keys in the last 30 years has fragmented the habitat of the Lower Keys marsh rabbit (Sylvilagus palustris hefneri), hereafter called marsh rabbit, and threatened it with extinction. On the Naval Air Station–Key West (NAS), Boca Chica Key, marsh rabbits exist as a meta-population of discrete habitat patches in a matrix of wetlands and airfield facilities. Airfield safety regulations require NAS to maintain vegetation below a minimum height on runway peripheries (clear zones). We developed a spatially-explicit, stage-structured, stochastic matrix model using the programs RAMAS-Metapop and ArcGIS. Model parameters were estimated using pellet counting (2001–2002), radio tracking (1991–1992 and 2001–2005, n = 75), and published literature. We compared a baseline no-action model to Alternative 1 that simulated impacts from the NAS airfield clearance project with no conservation measures for marsh rabbits and Alternative 2 that also simulated airfield clearance impacts. Alternative 2 included mitigation actions to offset impacts to marsh rabbits in the form of reduced mortality via free-roaming cat (Felis catus) control and creation of marsh rabbit habitat (e.g., salt marsh). Both alternatives increased the extinction risk (probability of extinction) from a baseline of 0.499 to 0.90 and 0.713 for Alternatives 1 and 2, respectively. Although airfield clearance with creation of marsh rabbit habitat (Alternative 2) increased extinction risk from the baseline scenario, reducing marsh rabbit mortality associated with control of free-roaming cats was an effective strategy to decrease this risk. Our research demonstrates the use of population viability analysis as a conservation planning tool for reducing human–wildlife conflicts. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol2/iss2/20cat controlhuman–wildlife conflictslower keys marsh rabbit; population viability analysissensitivity analysissylvilagus palustris hefneri
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David H. LaFever
Paige M. Schmidt
Neil D. Perry
Craig A. Faulhaber
Roel R. Lopez
Nova J. Silvy
Elizabeth A. Forys
spellingShingle David H. LaFever
Paige M. Schmidt
Neil D. Perry
Craig A. Faulhaber
Roel R. Lopez
Nova J. Silvy
Elizabeth A. Forys
Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit
Human-Wildlife Interactions
cat control
human–wildlife conflicts
lower keys marsh rabbit; population viability analysis
sensitivity analysis
sylvilagus palustris hefneri
author_facet David H. LaFever
Paige M. Schmidt
Neil D. Perry
Craig A. Faulhaber
Roel R. Lopez
Nova J. Silvy
Elizabeth A. Forys
author_sort David H. LaFever
title Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit
title_short Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit
title_full Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit
title_fullStr Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit
title_full_unstemmed Use of a Population Viability Analysis to Evaluate Human-Induced Impacts and Mitigation for the Endangered Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit
title_sort use of a population viability analysis to evaluate human-induced impacts and mitigation for the endangered lower keys marsh rabbit
publisher Utah State University
series Human-Wildlife Interactions
issn 2155-3874
2155-3874
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Rapid development and urbanization of the lower Florida Keys in the last 30 years has fragmented the habitat of the Lower Keys marsh rabbit (Sylvilagus palustris hefneri), hereafter called marsh rabbit, and threatened it with extinction. On the Naval Air Station–Key West (NAS), Boca Chica Key, marsh rabbits exist as a meta-population of discrete habitat patches in a matrix of wetlands and airfield facilities. Airfield safety regulations require NAS to maintain vegetation below a minimum height on runway peripheries (clear zones). We developed a spatially-explicit, stage-structured, stochastic matrix model using the programs RAMAS-Metapop and ArcGIS. Model parameters were estimated using pellet counting (2001–2002), radio tracking (1991–1992 and 2001–2005, n = 75), and published literature. We compared a baseline no-action model to Alternative 1 that simulated impacts from the NAS airfield clearance project with no conservation measures for marsh rabbits and Alternative 2 that also simulated airfield clearance impacts. Alternative 2 included mitigation actions to offset impacts to marsh rabbits in the form of reduced mortality via free-roaming cat (Felis catus) control and creation of marsh rabbit habitat (e.g., salt marsh). Both alternatives increased the extinction risk (probability of extinction) from a baseline of 0.499 to 0.90 and 0.713 for Alternatives 1 and 2, respectively. Although airfield clearance with creation of marsh rabbit habitat (Alternative 2) increased extinction risk from the baseline scenario, reducing marsh rabbit mortality associated with control of free-roaming cats was an effective strategy to decrease this risk. Our research demonstrates the use of population viability analysis as a conservation planning tool for reducing human–wildlife conflicts.
topic cat control
human–wildlife conflicts
lower keys marsh rabbit; population viability analysis
sensitivity analysis
sylvilagus palustris hefneri
url https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol2/iss2/20
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