Wetland hydrology, area, and isolation influence occupancy and spatial turnover of the painted turtle, Chrysemys picta

Habitat area and isolation have been useful predictors of species occupancy and turnover in highly fragmented systems. However, habitat quality also can influence occupancy dynamics, especially in patchy systems where habitat selection can be as important as stochastic demographic processes. We stud...

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Veröffentlicht in:Landscape ecology 2010-12, Vol.25 (10), p.1589-1600
Hauptverfasser: Cosentino, Bradley J, Schooley, Robert L, Phillips, Christopher A
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Phillips, Christopher A
description Habitat area and isolation have been useful predictors of species occupancy and turnover in highly fragmented systems. However, habitat quality also can influence occupancy dynamics, especially in patchy systems where habitat selection can be as important as stochastic demographic processes. We studied the spatial population dynamics of Chrysemys picta (painted turtle) in a network of 90 wetlands in Illinois, USA from 2007 to 2009. We first evaluated the relative influence of metapopulation factors (area, isolation) and habitat quality of focal patches on occupancy and turnover. Next, we tested the effect of habitat quality of source patches on occupancy and turnover at focal patches. Turnover was common with colonizations (n = 16) outnumbering extinctions (n = 10) between the first 2 years, and extinctions (n = 16) outnumbering colonizations (n = 3) between the second 2 years. Both metapopulation and habitat quality factors influenced C. picta occupancy dynamics. Colonization probability was related positively to spatial connectivity, wetland area, and habitat quality (wetland inundation, emergent vegetation cover). Extinction probability was related negatively to wetland area and emergent vegetation cover. Habitat quality of source patches strongly influenced initial occupancy but not turnover patterns. Because habitat quality for freshwater turtles is related to wetland hydrology, a change from drought to wet conditions during our study likely influenced distributional shifts. Thus, effects of habitat quality of source and focal patches on occupancy can vary in space and time. Both metapopulation and habitat quality factors may be needed to understand occupancy dynamics, even for species exhibiting patchy population structures.
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subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Chrysemys picta
Dispersal
Drought
Earth sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Ecology
Emergent vegetation
Environmental Management
Environmental quality
Environmental stochasticity
Exact sciences and technology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
Habitat selection
Habitats
Hydrology
Hydrology. Hydrogeology
Hydroperiod
Landscape Ecology
Landscape structure
Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning
Life Sciences
Metapopulation
Metapopulations
Nature Conservation
Reptiles & amphibians
Research Article
Source-sink
Species extinction
Sustainable Development
Target effect
Turtles
Vegetation cover
Wetlands
title Wetland hydrology, area, and isolation influence occupancy and spatial turnover of the painted turtle, Chrysemys picta
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