Data from: Landscape connectivity for wildlife: development and validation of multi-species linkage maps
The ability to identify regions of high functional connectivity for multiple wildlife species is of conservation interest with respect to forest management and corridor planning. We present a method that does not require independent, field-collected data, is insensitive to the placement of source an...
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Zusammenfassung: | The ability to identify regions of high functional connectivity for
multiple wildlife species is of conservation interest with respect to
forest management and corridor planning. We present a method that does not
require independent, field-collected data, is insensitive to the placement
of source and destination sites (nodes) for modeling connectivity, and
does not require the selection of a focal species. In the first step of
our approach, we created a cost surface that represented permeability of
the landscape to movement for a suite of species. We randomly selected
nodes around the perimeter of the buffered study area and used circuit
theory to connect pairs of nodes. When the buffer was removed, the
resulting current density map represented, for each grid cell, the
probability of use by moving animals. We found that using nodes that were
randomly located around the perimeter of the buffered study area was less
biased by node placement than randomly selecting nodes within the study
area. We also found that a buffer of ≥ 20% of the study area width was
sufficient to remove the effects of node placement on current density. We
tested our method by creating a map of connectivity in the Algonquin to
Adirondack region in eastern North America, and we validated the map with
independently collected data. We found that amphibians and reptiles were
more likely to cross roads in areas of high current density, and fishers
(Pekania [Martes] pennanti) used areas with high current density within
their home ranges. Our approach provides an efficient and cost-effective
method of predicting areas with relatively high functional connectivity. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.vr184 |