Evaluating density-weighted connectivity of black bears (Ursus americanus) in Glacier National Park with spatial capture-recapture models.

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY Movement Ecology Pub Date : 2024-01-23 DOI:10.1186/s40462-023-00445-7
Sarah L Carroll, Greta M Schmidt, John S Waller, Tabitha A Graves
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Abstract

Background: Improved understanding of wildlife population connectivity among protected area networks can support effective planning for the persistence of wildlife populations in the face of land use and climate change. Common approaches to estimating connectivity often rely on small samples of individuals without considering the spatial structure of populations, leading to limited understanding of how individual movement links to demography and population connectivity. Recently developed spatial capture-recapture (SCR) models provide a framework to formally connect inference about individual movement, connectivity, and population density, but few studies have applied this approach to empirical data to support connectivity planning.

Methods: We used mark-recapture data collected from 924 genetic detections of 598 American black bears (Ursus americanus) in 2004 with SCR ecological distance models to simultaneously estimate density, landscape resistance to movement, and population connectivity in Glacier National Park northwest Montana, USA. We estimated density and movement parameters separately for males and females and used model estimates to calculate predicted density-weighted connectivity surfaces.

Results: Model results indicated that landscape structure influences black bear density and space use in Glacier. The mean density estimate was 16.08 bears/100 km2 (95% CI 12.52-20.6) for females and 9.27 bears/100 km2 (95% CI 7.70-11.14) for males. Density increased with forest cover for both sexes. For male black bears, density decreased at higher grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) densities. Drainages, valley bottoms, and riparian vegetation decreased estimates of landscape resistance to movement for male and female bears. For males, forest cover also decreased estimated resistance to movement, but a transportation corridor bisecting the study area strongly increased resistance to movement presenting a barrier to connectivity.

Conclusions: Density-weighed connectivity surfaces highlighted areas important for population connectivity that were distinct from areas with high potential connectivity. For black bears in Glacier and surrounding landscapes, consideration of both vegetation and valley topography could inform the placement of underpasses along the transportation corridor in areas characterized by both high population density and potential connectivity. Our study demonstrates that the SCR ecological distance model can provide biologically realistic, spatially explicit predictions to support movement connectivity planning across large landscapes.

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利用空间捕获-再捕获模型评估冰川国家公园黑熊(Ursus americanus)的密度加权连接性。
背景:提高对保护区网络之间野生动物种群连通性的认识,有助于在面临土地利用和气候变化的情况下,对野生动物种群的持久性进行有效规划。估算连通性的常见方法往往依赖于个体的小样本,而不考虑种群的空间结构,导致对个体移动如何与人口统计和种群连通性联系的理解有限。最近开发的空间捕获-再捕获(SCR)模型提供了一个框架,可将个体运动、连通性和种群密度的推论正式联系起来,但很少有研究将这种方法应用于经验数据,以支持连通性规划:我们利用 2004 年对 598 头美洲黑熊(Ursus americanus)的 924 次基因检测收集到的标记再捕获数据和 SCR 生态距离模型,同时估算了美国蒙大拿州西北部冰川国家公园的密度、地貌对移动的阻力和种群连通性。我们分别估算了雄性和雌性的密度和移动参数,并使用模型估算值计算了预测的密度加权连接面:结果:模型结果表明,地貌结构影响了冰川黑熊的密度和空间利用。雌性黑熊的平均密度为 16.08 头/100 平方公里(95% CI 12.52-20.6),雄性黑熊的平均密度为 9.27 头/100 平方公里(95% CI 7.70-11.14)。雌雄黑熊的密度都随着森林覆盖率的增加而增加。雄性黑熊的密度在灰熊(Ursus arctos)密度较高时降低。排水沟、谷底和河岸植被降低了雄性和雌性黑熊的地形运动阻力估计值。对于雄性灰熊来说,森林植被也降低了估计的移动阻力,但一条横穿研究区域的交通走廊极大地增加了移动阻力,成为连通性的障碍:密度权衡连通性表面突出了对种群连通性非常重要的区域,这些区域与潜在连通性高的区域截然不同。对于冰川及周边地区的黑熊来说,考虑植被和山谷地形可以为在人口密度高和潜在连通性高的地区沿交通走廊设置地下通道提供参考。我们的研究表明,SCR 生态距离模型可以提供符合生物现实的、空间明确的预测,以支持大型地貌的运动连通性规划。
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来源期刊
Movement Ecology
Movement Ecology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
4.90%
发文量
47
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Movement Ecology is an open-access interdisciplinary journal publishing novel insights from empirical and theoretical approaches into the ecology of movement of the whole organism - either animals, plants or microorganisms - as the central theme. We welcome manuscripts on any taxa and any movement phenomena (e.g. foraging, dispersal and seasonal migration) addressing important research questions on the patterns, mechanisms, causes and consequences of organismal movement. Manuscripts will be rigorously peer-reviewed to ensure novelty and high quality.
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