Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.

Reasoning about the factors underlying habitat connectivity and the inter-habitat movement of species is essential to many areas of biological inquiry. In order to better describe and understand the ways in which the landscape may support species movement, an increasing amount of research has focuse...

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Main Authors: Timothy C Matisziw, Ashkan Gholamialam, Kathleen M Trauth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-12-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008540
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spelling doaj-88af4e36cd054cc7b2f7b9d12540e8632021-04-21T16:39:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582020-12-011612e100854010.1371/journal.pcbi.1008540Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.Timothy C MatisziwAshkan GholamialamKathleen M TrauthReasoning about the factors underlying habitat connectivity and the inter-habitat movement of species is essential to many areas of biological inquiry. In order to better describe and understand the ways in which the landscape may support species movement, an increasing amount of research has focused on identification of paths or corridors that may be important in providing connectivity among habitat. The least-cost path problem has proven to be an instrumental analytical tool in this sense. A complicating aspect of such path identification methods is how to best reconcile and integrate the array of criteria or objectives that species may consider in traversal of a landscape. In cases where habitat connectivity is thought to be influenced or guided by multiple objectives, numerous solutions to least-cost path problems can exist, representing tradeoffs between the objectives. In practice though, identification of these solutions can be very challenging and as such, only a small proportion of them are typically examined leading to a weak characterization of habitat connectivity. To address this computational challenge, a multiobjective optimization framework is proposed. A generalizable multiobjective least-cost path model is first detailed. A non-inferior set estimation (MONISE) algorithm for identifying supported efficient solutions to the multiobjective least-cost path model is then described. However, it is well known that unsupported efficient solutions (which are equally important) can also exist, but are typically ignored given that they are more difficult to identify. Thus, to enable the identification of the full set of efficient solutions (supported and unsupported) to the multiobjective model, a multi-criteria labeling algorithm is then proposed. The developed framework is applied to assess different conceptualizations of habitat connectivity supporting amphibian movement in a wetland system. The results highlight the range of tradeoffs in characterizations of connectivity that can exist when multiple objectives are thought to contribute to movement decisions and that the number of unsupported efficient solutions (which are typically ignored) can vastly outweigh that of the supported efficient solutions.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008540
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Timothy C Matisziw
Ashkan Gholamialam
Kathleen M Trauth
spellingShingle Timothy C Matisziw
Ashkan Gholamialam
Kathleen M Trauth
Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Timothy C Matisziw
Ashkan Gholamialam
Kathleen M Trauth
author_sort Timothy C Matisziw
title Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.
title_short Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.
title_full Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.
title_fullStr Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.
title_full_unstemmed Modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: An application to amphibian habitat systems.
title_sort modeling habitat connectivity in support of multiobjective species movement: an application to amphibian habitat systems.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Reasoning about the factors underlying habitat connectivity and the inter-habitat movement of species is essential to many areas of biological inquiry. In order to better describe and understand the ways in which the landscape may support species movement, an increasing amount of research has focused on identification of paths or corridors that may be important in providing connectivity among habitat. The least-cost path problem has proven to be an instrumental analytical tool in this sense. A complicating aspect of such path identification methods is how to best reconcile and integrate the array of criteria or objectives that species may consider in traversal of a landscape. In cases where habitat connectivity is thought to be influenced or guided by multiple objectives, numerous solutions to least-cost path problems can exist, representing tradeoffs between the objectives. In practice though, identification of these solutions can be very challenging and as such, only a small proportion of them are typically examined leading to a weak characterization of habitat connectivity. To address this computational challenge, a multiobjective optimization framework is proposed. A generalizable multiobjective least-cost path model is first detailed. A non-inferior set estimation (MONISE) algorithm for identifying supported efficient solutions to the multiobjective least-cost path model is then described. However, it is well known that unsupported efficient solutions (which are equally important) can also exist, but are typically ignored given that they are more difficult to identify. Thus, to enable the identification of the full set of efficient solutions (supported and unsupported) to the multiobjective model, a multi-criteria labeling algorithm is then proposed. The developed framework is applied to assess different conceptualizations of habitat connectivity supporting amphibian movement in a wetland system. The results highlight the range of tradeoffs in characterizations of connectivity that can exist when multiple objectives are thought to contribute to movement decisions and that the number of unsupported efficient solutions (which are typically ignored) can vastly outweigh that of the supported efficient solutions.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008540
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