Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape features

The concept of habitat and spatial extent are key features in landscape ecology. A non-precise definition of habitat and the wrong choice of the scale can affect model outcomes and our understanding about population conservation status. We proposed a framework and applied to five species representin...

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Main Authors: Ludmila Rattis, Ricardo Dobrovolski, Maurício Talebi, Rafael Loyola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-04-01
Series:Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2530064417301347
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spelling doaj-ce110e4f2acf4c908717d17539360b6f2020-12-31T04:43:29ZengElsevierPerspectives in Ecology and Conservation2530-06442018-04-0116297104Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape featuresLudmila Rattis0Ricardo Dobrovolski1Maurício Talebi2Rafael Loyola3Ecology Graduate Program, State University of Campinas, P.O. Box 6109, CEP 13083-970 Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil; Woods Hole Research Center, Falmouth, MA Zip Code 02540, USA; Corresponding author at: Woods Hole Research Center, 149 Woods Hole Road, Zip Code 02540, Falmouth, MA, USA.Laboratório de Ecologia e Conservação, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal da Bahia, CEP 40170-180 Salvador, Bahia, BrazilDepartmento de Biologia, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Rua Professor Artur Riedel, 275, Campus Diadema, CEP 09972-270 São Paulo, BrazilLaboratório de Biogeografia da Conservação, Departamento de Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Avenida Esperança s/n, Campus Samambaia, CEP 74.690-900 Goiânia, Goiás, BrazilThe concept of habitat and spatial extent are key features in landscape ecology. A non-precise definition of habitat and the wrong choice of the scale can affect model outcomes and our understanding about population conservation status. We proposed a framework and applied to five species representing different ecological profiles (1) to model species occurrences and (2) to evaluate habitat structure at nine different scale extents from local landscapes to entire species range. Then, we (3) evaluated the scale sensitivity of each metric and (4) assessed if the scale sensitivity of each metric changed according to species. Our model was succesfull in predicting species occurrence for all species. When we applied deductive suitability models, the total area of remaining habitat varied from 83% to 12% of the original extension of occurrence. On average, the proportion of habitat amount, fragmentation, and carrying capacity decreased and functional increased as scale extent increased. Habitat amount and fragmentation assessed locally would show the same pattern across species’ range, but carrying capacity and functional connectivity – which consider biological features – were affected by the choice of scale. Also, the inclusion of species preferences on habitat modeling diminished commission errors arising from landscape-scale underestimation of species’ occurrences. Local landscapes samples were not able to represent species’ entire range feature and the way that individuals reach the remaining habitat depends on species’ features. Species conservation status should be assessed preferably at the range scale and include species biological features as an additional factor determining species occupancy inside geographic ranges.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2530064417301347Carrying capacityDeductive habitat suitability modelsFunctional connectivityLandscape structureMovementScale dependency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ludmila Rattis
Ricardo Dobrovolski
Maurício Talebi
Rafael Loyola
spellingShingle Ludmila Rattis
Ricardo Dobrovolski
Maurício Talebi
Rafael Loyola
Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape features
Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation
Carrying capacity
Deductive habitat suitability models
Functional connectivity
Landscape structure
Movement
Scale dependency
author_facet Ludmila Rattis
Ricardo Dobrovolski
Maurício Talebi
Rafael Loyola
author_sort Ludmila Rattis
title Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape features
title_short Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape features
title_full Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape features
title_fullStr Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape features
title_full_unstemmed Geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: A framework linking species and landscape features
title_sort geographic range-scale assessment of species conservation status: a framework linking species and landscape features
publisher Elsevier
series Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation
issn 2530-0644
publishDate 2018-04-01
description The concept of habitat and spatial extent are key features in landscape ecology. A non-precise definition of habitat and the wrong choice of the scale can affect model outcomes and our understanding about population conservation status. We proposed a framework and applied to five species representing different ecological profiles (1) to model species occurrences and (2) to evaluate habitat structure at nine different scale extents from local landscapes to entire species range. Then, we (3) evaluated the scale sensitivity of each metric and (4) assessed if the scale sensitivity of each metric changed according to species. Our model was succesfull in predicting species occurrence for all species. When we applied deductive suitability models, the total area of remaining habitat varied from 83% to 12% of the original extension of occurrence. On average, the proportion of habitat amount, fragmentation, and carrying capacity decreased and functional increased as scale extent increased. Habitat amount and fragmentation assessed locally would show the same pattern across species’ range, but carrying capacity and functional connectivity – which consider biological features – were affected by the choice of scale. Also, the inclusion of species preferences on habitat modeling diminished commission errors arising from landscape-scale underestimation of species’ occurrences. Local landscapes samples were not able to represent species’ entire range feature and the way that individuals reach the remaining habitat depends on species’ features. Species conservation status should be assessed preferably at the range scale and include species biological features as an additional factor determining species occupancy inside geographic ranges.
topic Carrying capacity
Deductive habitat suitability models
Functional connectivity
Landscape structure
Movement
Scale dependency
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2530064417301347
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