Demographic responses to habitat fragmentation: Experimental tests at the landscape and patch scale

被引:67
|
作者
Dooley, JL
Bowers, MA
机构
[1] Univ Virginia, Dept Environm Sci, Boyce, VA 22620 USA
[2] Univ Virginia, Blandy Expt Farm, Boyce, VA 22620 USA
关键词
demography; habitat fragmentation; habitat patches; landscape ecology; Microtus pennsylvanicus;
D O I
10.2307/176593
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
We tested the ecological consequences of habitat fragmentation by comparing the density, population growth rate, survivorship, and recruitment of Microtus pennsylvanicus populations within a 20-ha fragmented landscape with those of populations in a 20-ha unfragmented landscape. We also tested for fragment-size effects by comparing the same measures of demographic performance across three fragment sizes (0.06, 0.25, and 1.0 ha). During 17 censuses between June 1993 and October 1994, we recorded 10 020 captures of 3946 individuals and found strong landscape differences but weak fragment-size effects. Although fragmentation reduced the habitable area by 72%, density and adult recruitment were significantly higher on the fragmented landscape relative to the control. With the exception of adult recruitment (higher on small relative to medium and large patches), no significant demographic differences existed among patches of different size. Low rates of between-population movement and differential juvenile growth rates suggested that higher recruitment rates on the fragmented landscape likely resulted from enhanced local reproduction rather than from immigration. Thus, despite the fact that populations in the fragmented landscape experienced severe habitat loss, some individuals on fragments accrued important reproductive advantages (possibly as a result of diminished social costs or enhanced food resources). That population and individual responses to fragmentation could differ so dramatically provides a novel result that illustrates the importance of using hierarchical field designs in tests of population responses to large-scale habitat alteration. We conclude that controlled, large-scale field tests can serve as an important intermediary between the inherent abstraction of simulation modeling and what is observed in the real world.
引用
收藏
页码:969 / 980
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A controlled, hierarchical study of habitat fragmentation: responses at the individual, patch, and landscape scale
    Bowers, MA
    Dooley, JL
    LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 1999, 14 (04) : 381 - 389
  • [2] A controlled, hierarchical study of habitat fragmentation: responses at the individual, patch, and landscape scale
    Michael A. Bowers
    James L. Dooley
    Landscape Ecology, 1999, 14 : 381 - 389
  • [3] Landscape-scale habitat fragmentation is positively related to biodiversity, despite patch-scale ecosystem decay
    Riva, Federico
    Fahrig, Lenore
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2023, 26 (02) : 268 - 277
  • [4] Habitat fragmentation and the distribution of amphibians: patch and landscape correlates in farmland
    Kolozsvary, MB
    Swihart, RK
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE ZOOLOGIE, 1999, 77 (08): : 1288 - 1299
  • [5] Habitat fragmentation and the distribution of amphibians: Patch and landscape correlates in farmland
    Kolozsvary, Mary B.
    Swihart, Robert K.
    Canadian Journal of Zoology, 1999, 77 (08): : 1288 - 1299
  • [6] A demographic analysis of vole population responses to fragmentation and destruction of habitat
    Johannesen, E
    Aars, J
    Andreassen, HP
    Ims, RA
    POPULATION ECOLOGY, 2003, 45 (01) : 47 - 58
  • [7] Fish Responses to Experimental Fragmentation of Seagrass Habitat
    Macreadie, Peter I.
    Hindell, Jeremy S.
    Jenkins, Gregory P.
    Connolly, Rod M.
    Keough, Michael J.
    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2009, 23 (03) : 644 - 652
  • [8] Landscape responses of bats to habitat fragmentation in Atlantic forest of Paraguay
    Gorresen, PM
    Willig, MR
    JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 2004, 85 (04) : 688 - 697
  • [9] Avifaunal responses to landscape-scale habitat fragmentation in the littoral forests of south-eastern Madagascar
    Watson, JEM
    AFRICAN BIODIVERSITY: MOLECULES, ORGANISMS, ECOSYSTEMS, 2005, : 253 - 260
  • [10] Demographic responses of Middle Spotted Woodpeckers (Dendrocopos medius) to habitat fragmentation
    Robles, Huco
    Ciudad, Carlos
    Vera, Ruben
    Olea, Pedro P.
    Matthysen, Erik
    AUK, 2008, 125 (01): : 131 - 139