Measuring impacts on species with models and metrics of varying ecological and computational complexity

Approaches to assess the impacts of landscape disturbance scenarios on species range from metrics based on patterns of occurrence or habitat to comprehensive models that explicitly include ecological processes. The choice of metrics and models affects how impacts are interpreted and conservation dec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Conservation biology 2020-12, Vol.34 (6), p.1512-1524
Hauptverfasser: Hallam, Christopher D., Wintle, Brendan A., Kujala, Heini, Whitehead, Amy L., Nicholson, Emily
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Approaches to assess the impacts of landscape disturbance scenarios on species range from metrics based on patterns of occurrence or habitat to comprehensive models that explicitly include ecological processes. The choice of metrics and models affects how impacts are interpreted and conservation decisions. We explored the impacts of 3 realistic disturbance scenarios on 4 species with different ecological and taxonomic traits. We used progressively more complex models and metrics to evaluate relative impact and rank of scenarios on the species. Models ranged from species distribution models that relied on implicit assumptions about environmental factors and species presence to highly parameterized spatially explicit population models that explicitly included ecological processes and stochasticity. Metrics performed consistently in ranking different scenarios in order of severity primarily when variation in impact was driven by habitat amount. However, they differed in rank for cases where dispersal dynamics were critical in influencing metapopulation persistence. Impacts of scenarios on species with low dispersal ability were better characterized using models that explicitly captured these processes. Metapopulation capacity provided rank orders that most consistently correlated with those from highly parameterized and data‐rich models and incorporated information about dispersal with little additional computational and data cost. Our results highlight the importance of explicitly considering species’ ecology, spatial configuration of habitat, and disturbance when choosing indicators of species persistence. We suggest using hybrid approaches that are a mixture of simple and complex models to improve multispecies assessments. Medición de los Impactos sobre las Especies con Modelos y Medidas de Complejidad Ecológica y Computacional Variante Resumen Las estrategias para evaluar el impacto de los escenarios de perturbación de paisaje sobre la distribución de las especies van desde las medidas basadas en patrones de presencia o hábitat hasta los modelos integrales que incluyen explícitamente a los procesos ecológicos. La elección de medidas y modelos afecta la interpretación de los impactos y las decisiones de conservación. Exploramos los impactos de tres escenarios realistas de perturbación sobre cuatro especies con características ecológicas y taxonómicas diferentes. Usamos progresivamente modelos y medidas más complejas para evaluar el impacto relativo y la cl
ISSN:0888-8892
1523-1739
DOI:10.1111/cobi.13524