4.7 Article

Circuit theory emphasizes the importance of edge-crossing decisions in dispersal-scale movements of a forest passerine

期刊

LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
卷 29, 期 5, 页码 831-841

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-014-0019-x

关键词

Landscape functional connectivity; Circuit theory; Least-cost path; Forest birds; Ovenbirds; Edge-crossing decisions; Cost surface

资金

  1. NSERC
  2. Universite Laval, Canada
  3. Government of Canada, via the Canadian Forest Service of Natural Resources Canada
  4. Canadian Space Agency
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Measuring landscape connectivity in ways that reflect an animal's propensity or reluctance to move across a given landscape is key for planning effective conservation strategies. Resistance distance, based on circuit theory, is one such measure relevant for modeling how broad-scale animal movements over long time periods may lead to gene flow across the landscape. Despite the success of circuit theory in landscape genetic studies, its applicability to model finer-scale processes such as the movement patterns of individual animals within their breeding grounds (e.g., while prospecting for territories) has yet to be tested. Here, we applied both circuit models and least-cost models to understand the relationship between landscape connectivity and return time of Ovenbirds (Seiurus aurocapilla) that had been translocated at least 20 km from their home territory near Qu,bec City, Canada. Using an iterative optimization process, we derived resistance values for three cover types (forest, edge, and open) that resulted in resistance distance values that best explained Ovenbird return times. We also identified the cover-type resistance values that yielded length of least-cost path estimates that best explained return times of the translocated birds. The circuit theory and least-cost path methods were equally supported by the data despite being based on different sets of resistance values. The optimal resistance values for calculating resistance distance indicated that for Ovenbirds, traversing a given distance of edge habitat presented a substantially greater resistance than that of open areas. On the other hand, optimized resistances of edge and open were very similar for calculating length of least-cost path. The circuit theory approach suggested that for an Ovenbird moving through fragmented habitat, the number of forest-open transitions (i.e., edge-crossings) that an individual must make is critical to understanding return times after translocation. The least-cost path approach, on the other hand, suggested that the birds strongly avoid all open areas, regardless of size. Circuit theory offers an important new approach for understanding landscapes from the perspective of individuals moving within their breeding range, at finer spatial scales and shorter time scales than have been previously considered.

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