在烧毁地貌中种植灌木丛的潜在栖息地建模

Julie A. Heinrichs, M. S. O’Donnell, Elizabeth K. Orning, David A. Pyke, M. Ricca, P. Coates, Cameron L. Aldridge
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摘要

许多重新植被项目都是为了使野生动物受益。然而,很少有先验评估来评估恢复行动在恢复野生动物栖息地方面的潜在效率。我们开发了一个空间植被-栖息地恢复模型,以评估野外种植策略可在多大程度上恢复野火后野生动物的多因素栖息地条件。我们模拟了野火足迹、多种鼠尾草(蒿属植物)种植方案,并跟踪了野火后 15 年的预计植被生长情况。我们使用植被过渡框架来跟踪和估算重新植被能在多大程度上加快美国西部大盆地大鼠(Centrocercus)种群栖息地的恢复。我们评估了火灾后 15 年的栖息地数量,以估算重新植被在多大程度上可加快栖息地的恢复。我们的研究结果突显了沙鸡等广域野生动物所需的广阔区域与种植处理所创造的相对较小区域之间的潜在脱节。旨在使沙鸡受益的栖息地恢复和种植策略可能只会加快局部栖息地的恢复。本研究提供了一个实例,说明将植被重建与栖息地建模联系起来的方法如何能够确定栖息地改善的预期恢复投资回报范围,并支持对有限的恢复资源进行战略性利用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Modeling the Potential Habitat Gained by Planting Sagebrush in Burned Landscapes
Many revegetation projects are intended to benefit wildlife species. Yet, there are few a priori evaluations that assess the potential efficiency of restoration actions in recovering wildlife habitats. We developed a spatial vegetation–habitat recovery model to gauge the degree to which field planting strategies could be expected to recover multi-factor habitat conditions for wildlife following wildfires. We simulated a wildfire footprint, multiple sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) planting scenarios, and tracked projected vegetation growth for 15 years post-fire. We used a vegetation transition framework to track and estimate the degree to which revegetation could accelerate habitat restoration for a Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus) population within the Great Basin, western United States. We assessed the amount of habitat 15 years post-fire to estimate the degree to which revegetation could be expected to accelerate habitat restoration. Our results highlight a potential disconnect between the expansive areas required by wide-ranging wildlife such as sage-grouse and the relatively small areas that planting treatments have created. Habitat restorations and planting strategies that are intended to benefit sage-grouse may only speed up localized habitat restoration. This study provides an example of how linked revegetation–habitat modeling approaches can scope the expected return on restoration investment for habitat improvements and support the strategic use of limited restoration resources.
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