Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.

The role of local habitat geometry (habitat area and isolation) in predicting species distribution has become an increasingly more important issue, because habitat loss and fragmentation cause species range contraction and extinction. However, it has also become clear that other factors, in particul...

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Main Authors: Petter Glorvigen, Harry P Andreassen, Rolf A Ims
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3577918?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b07034127b2143c4a1425a0b43b24a872020-11-25T02:33:31ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0182e5646210.1371/journal.pone.0056462Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.Petter GlorvigenHarry P AndreassenRolf A ImsThe role of local habitat geometry (habitat area and isolation) in predicting species distribution has become an increasingly more important issue, because habitat loss and fragmentation cause species range contraction and extinction. However, it has also become clear that other factors, in particular regional factors (environmental stochasticity and regional population dynamics), should be taken into account when predicting colonisation and extinction. In a live trapping study of a mainland-island metapopulation of the root vole (Microtus oeconomus) we found extensive occupancy dynamics across 15 riparian islands, but yet an overall balance between colonisation and extinction over 4 years. The 54 live trapping surveys conducted over 13 seasons revealed imperfect detection and proxies of population density had to be included in robust design, multi-season occupancy models to achieve unbiased rate estimates. Island colonisation probability was parsimoniously predicted by the multi-annual density fluctuations of the regional mainland population and local island habitat quality, while extinction probability was predicted by island population density and the level of the recent flooding events (the latter being the main regionalized disturbance regime in the study system). Island size and isolation had no additional predictive power and thus such local geometric habitat characteristics may be overrated as predictors of vole habitat occupancy relative to measures of local habitat quality. Our results suggest also that dynamic features of the larger region and/or the metapopulation as a whole, owing to spatially correlated environmental stochasticity and/or biotic interactions, may rule the colonisation-extinction dynamics of boreal vole metapopulations. Due to high capacities for dispersal and habitat tracking voles originating from large source populations can rapidly colonise remote and small high quality habitat patches and re-establish populations that have gone extinct due to demographic (small population size) and environmental stochasticity (e.g. extreme climate events).http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3577918?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Petter Glorvigen
Harry P Andreassen
Rolf A Ims
spellingShingle Petter Glorvigen
Harry P Andreassen
Rolf A Ims
Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Petter Glorvigen
Harry P Andreassen
Rolf A Ims
author_sort Petter Glorvigen
title Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.
title_short Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.
title_full Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.
title_fullStr Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.
title_full_unstemmed Local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.
title_sort local and regional determinants of colonisation-extinction dynamics of a riparian mainland-island root vole metapopulation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description The role of local habitat geometry (habitat area and isolation) in predicting species distribution has become an increasingly more important issue, because habitat loss and fragmentation cause species range contraction and extinction. However, it has also become clear that other factors, in particular regional factors (environmental stochasticity and regional population dynamics), should be taken into account when predicting colonisation and extinction. In a live trapping study of a mainland-island metapopulation of the root vole (Microtus oeconomus) we found extensive occupancy dynamics across 15 riparian islands, but yet an overall balance between colonisation and extinction over 4 years. The 54 live trapping surveys conducted over 13 seasons revealed imperfect detection and proxies of population density had to be included in robust design, multi-season occupancy models to achieve unbiased rate estimates. Island colonisation probability was parsimoniously predicted by the multi-annual density fluctuations of the regional mainland population and local island habitat quality, while extinction probability was predicted by island population density and the level of the recent flooding events (the latter being the main regionalized disturbance regime in the study system). Island size and isolation had no additional predictive power and thus such local geometric habitat characteristics may be overrated as predictors of vole habitat occupancy relative to measures of local habitat quality. Our results suggest also that dynamic features of the larger region and/or the metapopulation as a whole, owing to spatially correlated environmental stochasticity and/or biotic interactions, may rule the colonisation-extinction dynamics of boreal vole metapopulations. Due to high capacities for dispersal and habitat tracking voles originating from large source populations can rapidly colonise remote and small high quality habitat patches and re-establish populations that have gone extinct due to demographic (small population size) and environmental stochasticity (e.g. extreme climate events).
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3577918?pdf=render
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