几个小型的野生动物交叉结构比一个大型的好吗?从大型野生动物保护的角度进行论证

IF 1.2 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Nature Conservation Research Pub Date : 2022-03-25 DOI:10.3897/natureconservation.47.67979
J. Helldin
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引用次数: 3

摘要

许多国家越来越多地在主要公路和铁路上建造大型野生动物穿越结构,目前关于线性基础设施中野生动物缓解的准则倾向于主张在目标物种的主要活动走廊上建造大型穿越结构。然而,运动走廊的概念受到了挑战,将动物运动限制在瓶颈中会带来风险。在本文中,我解决了道路生态学的SLOSS困境,即讨论沿线性屏障的单个大型或多个小型交叉结构是否会为野生动物带来最大的利益,并以瑞典大型野生动物的交叉结构为例。我指出了投资于一个大型交叉结构的生态和实际风险,并列举了一些情况,在这些情况下,通过建造几个较小的交叉结构,在景观中分配保护工作可能更有益;例如,当生态知识不足时,当动物相互作用预计会很重要时,当景观随着时间的推移而变化时,或者当未来人类发展无法控制时。我认为,这种情况往往是基础设施规划面临的情况,因此,默认策略应该是分散,而不是集中在主要交通基础设施上的通行机会。我建议将通行机会分布在几个较小的交叉结构上,这样可以分散风险,而且这种战略可以促进野生动物缓解规划。然而,选择什么取决于景观组成和生态以及目标物种之间的关系。应该选择一个单一的大型结构,它可能可以为大部分目标动物服务,并且可以保证交叉结构的长期功能。需要新的研究来支持在交叉结构的大小和数量之间进行权衡。野生动物穿越结构的成本效益分析目前很少,需要进一步探索。交叉结构的摄像机陷阱和视频监控提供了分析细节的机会,例如,根据性别、年龄、地位和分组的任何个体偏见,以及物种和个体之间的任何对抗。野生动物生态学研究需要更好地解决公路和铁路规划所提出的关于特定运动路线和运动距离的重要性的问题。
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Are several small wildlife crossing structures better than a single large? Arguments from the perspective of large wildlife conservation
Crossing structures for large wildlife are increasingly being constructed at major roads and railways in many countries and current guidelines for wildlife mitigation at linear infrastructures tend to advocate for large crossing structures sited at major movement corridors for the target species. The concept of movement corridors has, however, been challenged and pinching animal movements into bottlenecks entails risks. In this paper, I address the SLOSS dilemma of road ecology, i.e. the discussion whether a Single Large Or Several Small crossing structures along a linear barrier would produce the most benefit for wildlife, using the case of crossing structures for large wildlife in Sweden. I point out risks, ecological as well as practical, with investing in one large crossing structure and list a number of situations where it may be more beneficial to distribute the conservation efforts in the landscape by constructing several smaller crossing structures; for example, when the ecological knowledge is insufficient, when animal interactions are expected to be significant, when the landscape changes over time or when future human development cannot be controlled. I argue that such situations are often what infrastructure planning faces and that the default strategy, therefore, should be to distribute, rather than to concentrate passage opportunities along major transport infrastructures. I suggest that distributing passage opportunities over several smaller crossing structures would convey a risk diversification and that this strategy could facilitate the planning of wildlife mitigation. What to choose would however depend on, inter alia, landscape composition and ecology and on relationships amongst target species. A single large structure should be selected where it is likely that it can serve a large proportion of target animals and where the long-term functionality of the crossing structure can be guaranteed. New research is needed to support trade-offs between size and number of crossing structures. Cost-effectiveness analyses of wildlife crossing structures are currently rare and need to be further explored. Camera trapping and video surveillance of crossing structures provide opportunities to analyse details concerning, for example, any individual biases according to sex, age, status and grouping and any antagonism between species and individuals. Wildlife ecology research needs to better address questions posed by road and railway planning regarding the importance of specific movement routes and movement distances.
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来源期刊
Nature Conservation Research
Nature Conservation Research BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
34
审稿时长
13 weeks
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