A habitat is not enough - increasing the chances of success for species reintroduction in riverscapes by habitat modeling and connectivity analysis

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Thomas C. Wagner , Romy Woellner
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Abstract

Alpine rivers are among the most heavily modified ecosystems in Europe. Following massive interventions in the 18th and 19th centuries, many plant species specialized in these challenging environments declined and are now endangered or even locally extinct. Today, attempts are being made to reintroduce these species as part of restoration measures, but only a few are successful. The selection of potential sites for reintroduction is commonly intuitive and based on practical considerations, while a prior scientific assessment of habitat availability and habitat connectivity is lacking. To increase the success of future reintroductions, we employ a habitat suitability model and subsequent habitat connectivity analysis to identify promising regions and patches for reintroduction within a riverscape. We demonstrate this approach using the Alpine river specialists Chondrilla chondrilloides and Myricaria germanica in three differently degraded and one restored section of the large Alpine river Isar. All river sections provide habitats for both species, but with increasing degradation, habitats become fewer and less connected. For the species with a narrower habitat niche and lower dispersal ability, suitable and connected patches that support a self-sustained metapopulation are only found in the near-natural sections. Despite an improvement in the habitat situation, the patch size in the restored section is too small, and the patches are too scattered to support a successful reintroduction of the species. We show that this evidence-based approach outperforms an intuitive selection of out-planting sites. The results further underline the importance of using scientific habitat analysis to increase the success of reintroduction measures.
仅有栖息地是不够的--通过栖息地建模和连通性分析提高在河流景观中重新引入物种的成功几率
阿尔卑斯山河流是欧洲生态系统变化最严重的地区之一。在 18 世纪和 19 世纪的大规模干预之后,许多专门生长在这些充满挑战的环境中的植物物种逐渐减少,现在已经濒临灭绝,甚至在局部地区灭绝。如今,作为恢复措施的一部分,人们正在尝试重新引入这些物种,但只有少数获得了成功。重新引入的潜在地点选择通常是直观的,基于实际考虑,而缺乏对栖息地可用性和栖息地连通性的事先科学评估。为了提高未来重新引入的成功率,我们采用了一种栖息地适宜性模型和随后的栖息地连通性分析,以确定河流景观中有望重新引入的区域和斑块。我们利用阿尔卑斯大河伊萨尔河的三个不同退化河段和一个修复河段中的阿尔卑斯河流专家Chondrilla chondrilloides和Myricaria germanica来演示这种方法。所有河段都为这两个物种提供了栖息地,但随着退化程度的加剧,栖息地变得越来越少,连接程度也越来越低。对于栖息地较窄、扩散能力较弱的物种来说,只有在接近自然的河段才能找到合适且相连的斑块,以支持自我维持的种群。尽管栖息地状况有所改善,但恢复地段的斑块面积太小,斑块过于分散,无法支持该物种的成功再引入。我们的研究表明,这种基于证据的方法优于凭直觉选择外植点的方法。这些结果进一步强调了利用科学的生境分析来提高重新引入措施成功率的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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