Data from: Dispersal and connectivity in increasingly extreme climatic conditions
While climate change has been shown to impact several life-history traits of wild-living animal populations, little is known about its effects on dispersal and connectivity. Here, we capitalize on the highly variable flooding regime of the Okavango Delta to investigate impacts of changing environmen...
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Zusammenfassung: | While climate change has been shown to impact several life-history traits
of wild-living animal populations, little is known about its effects on
dispersal and connectivity. Here, we capitalize on the highly variable
flooding regime of the Okavango Delta to investigate impacts of changing
environmental conditions on dispersal and connectivity of the endangered
African wild dog (Lycaon pictus). Based on remote sensed flood extents
observed over 20 years, we derive two extreme flood scenarios: a minimum
and a maximum flood extent; representative of very dry and very wet
environmental periods. These conditions are akin to those anticipated
under increased climatic variability, as it is expected under climate
change. Using a movement model parametrized with GPS data from dispersing
individuals, we simulate 12,000 individual dispersal trajectories across
the ecosystem under both scenarios and investigate patterns of
connectivity. Across the entire ecosystem, surface water coverage during
maximum flood extent reduces dispersal success (i.e., the propensity of
individuals to disperse between adjacent subpopulations) by 12% and
increases dispersal durations by 17%. Locally, however, dispersal success
diminishes by as much as 78%. Depending on the flood extent, alternative
dispersal corridors emerge, some of which in the immediate vicinity of
human-dominated landscapes. Notably, under maximum flood extent, the
number of dispersing trajectories moving into human-dominated landscapes
decreases by 41% at the Okavango Delta’s inflow, but increases by 126% at
the Delta’s distal end. This may drive the amplification of human-wildlife
conflict. Whilst predicting the impacts of climate change on environmental
conditions on-the-ground remains challenging, our results highlight that
environmental change may have significant consequences for dispersal
patterns and connectivity, and ultimately, population viability.
Acknowledging and anticipating such impacts will be key to effective
conservation strategies and to preserve vital dispersal corridors in light
of climate change and other human-related landscape alterations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.z34tmpgnm |