Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements

Habitat fragmentation and destruction caused by linear infrastructure, including roads, railways, and power line corridors, are recognized as major threats to biodiversity around the world. Roads can act as barriers by impeding animal movement and restricting animal space use. An understanding of fa...

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Main Author: Chen, Hsiang Ling
Other Authors: Koprowski, John L.
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/555947
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-5559472015-10-23T05:43:18Z Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements Chen, Hsiang Ling Koprowski, John L. Koprowski, John L. Gimblett, Randy H. Schwalbe, Cecil R. Steidl, Robert J. Barrier effect Exotic species Road Small mammals Tree squirrels Natural Resources Anthropogenic disturbance Habitat fragmentation and destruction caused by linear infrastructure, including roads, railways, and power line corridors, are recognized as major threats to biodiversity around the world. Roads can act as barriers by impeding animal movement and restricting animal space use. An understanding of factors that influence barrier effects is important to discern the impacts of habitat fragmentation and to develop appropriate mitigation. The barrier effects of roads are driven by several distinct but not mutually exclusive mechanisms that include traffic, edge, and gap avoidance. We used an endangered forest obligate, the Mount Graham red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus grahamensis), as our study organism to assess effects of traffic noise on animal occurrence and demonstrated that traffic noise had spatially extensive and negative effects on site occupancy after accounting for effects of distance from roads and the environment. We investigated barrier effects of forest roads and assessed effects of traffic, road edges, and canopy gaps on space use of Mt. Graham red squirrels and compared to the response of introduced, edge-tolerant Abert's squirrels (Sciurus aberti). Forest roads acted as partial barriers for red squirrels regardless of traffic volume likely due to avoidance of canopy gap created by roads, whereas Abert's squirrels showed no avoidance of roads. Therefore, roads restricted movement and space use of a native forest-dependent species while creating habitat preferred by an introduced, edge-tolerated species. Through a meta-analysis of studies that quantified road crossing behavior by mammals, we found that all types of roads, from major highways to narrow forest roads, can impede movement for certain species of mammals. Magnitude of barrier effects of roads decreased as species body mass increased, and was affected positively by increasing road width. We suggest that the species-specific magnitude of barrier effects of roads may be anticipated with basic information from life history traits and road characteristics that are readily accessed through open resources or easily measured. 2015 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/555947 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Barrier effect
Exotic species
Road
Small mammals
Tree squirrels
Natural Resources
Anthropogenic disturbance
spellingShingle Barrier effect
Exotic species
Road
Small mammals
Tree squirrels
Natural Resources
Anthropogenic disturbance
Chen, Hsiang Ling
Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements
description Habitat fragmentation and destruction caused by linear infrastructure, including roads, railways, and power line corridors, are recognized as major threats to biodiversity around the world. Roads can act as barriers by impeding animal movement and restricting animal space use. An understanding of factors that influence barrier effects is important to discern the impacts of habitat fragmentation and to develop appropriate mitigation. The barrier effects of roads are driven by several distinct but not mutually exclusive mechanisms that include traffic, edge, and gap avoidance. We used an endangered forest obligate, the Mount Graham red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus grahamensis), as our study organism to assess effects of traffic noise on animal occurrence and demonstrated that traffic noise had spatially extensive and negative effects on site occupancy after accounting for effects of distance from roads and the environment. We investigated barrier effects of forest roads and assessed effects of traffic, road edges, and canopy gaps on space use of Mt. Graham red squirrels and compared to the response of introduced, edge-tolerant Abert's squirrels (Sciurus aberti). Forest roads acted as partial barriers for red squirrels regardless of traffic volume likely due to avoidance of canopy gap created by roads, whereas Abert's squirrels showed no avoidance of roads. Therefore, roads restricted movement and space use of a native forest-dependent species while creating habitat preferred by an introduced, edge-tolerated species. Through a meta-analysis of studies that quantified road crossing behavior by mammals, we found that all types of roads, from major highways to narrow forest roads, can impede movement for certain species of mammals. Magnitude of barrier effects of roads decreased as species body mass increased, and was affected positively by increasing road width. We suggest that the species-specific magnitude of barrier effects of roads may be anticipated with basic information from life history traits and road characteristics that are readily accessed through open resources or easily measured.
author2 Koprowski, John L.
author_facet Koprowski, John L.
Chen, Hsiang Ling
author Chen, Hsiang Ling
author_sort Chen, Hsiang Ling
title Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements
title_short Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements
title_full Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements
title_fullStr Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements
title_full_unstemmed Barrier Effects Of Roads And Traffic On Animal Occurrence, Space Use, And Movements
title_sort barrier effects of roads and traffic on animal occurrence, space use, and movements
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/555947
work_keys_str_mv AT chenhsiangling barriereffectsofroadsandtrafficonanimaloccurrencespaceuseandmovements
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