Data from: Replicated landscape genetic and network analyses reveal wide variation in functional connectivity for American pikas
Landscape connectivity is essential for maintaining viable populations, particularly for species restricted to fragmented habitats or naturally arrayed in metapopulations and facing rapid climate change. The importance of assessing both structural connectivity (the physical distribution of favorable...
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Zusammenfassung: | Landscape connectivity is essential for maintaining viable populations,
particularly for species restricted to fragmented habitats or naturally
arrayed in metapopulations and facing rapid climate change. The importance
of assessing both structural connectivity (the physical distribution of
favorable habitat patches) and functional connectivity (how species move
among habitat patches) for managing such species is well understood.
However, the degree to which functional connectivity for a species varies
among landscapes, and the resulting implications for conservation, have
rarely been assessed. We used a landscape genetics approach to evaluate
resistance to gene flow and, thus, to determine how landscape and
climate-related variables influence gene flow for American pikas (Ochotona
princeps) in eight federally managed sites in the western United States.
We used those empirically-derived, individual-based landscape resistance
models in conjunction with predictive occupancy models to generate
patch-based network models describing functional landscape connectivity.
Metareplication across landscapes enabled identification of limiting
factors for dispersal that would not otherwise have been apparent. Despite
the cool microclimates characteristic of pika habitat, south-facing
aspects consistently represented higher resistance to movement, supporting
the previous hypothesis that exposure to relatively high temperatures may
limit dispersal in American pikas. We found that other barriers to
dispersal included areas with a high degree of topographic relief, such as
cliffs and ravines, as well as streams and distances greater than one to
four kilometers depending on the site. Using the empirically-derived
network models of habitat patch connectivity, we identified habitat
patches that were likely disproportionately important for maintaining
functional connectivity, areas in which habitat appeared fragmented, and
locations that could be targeted for management actions to improve
functional connectivity. We concluded that climate change, besides
influencing patch occupancy as predicted by other studies, may alter
landscape resistance for pikas, thereby influencing functional
connectivity through multiple pathways simultaneously. Spatial
autocorrelation among genotypes varied across study sites and was largest
where habitat was most dispersed, suggesting that dispersal distances
increased with habitat fragmentation, up to a point. This study
demonstrates how landscape fe |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.8j65p |