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Citation
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HERO ID
8028855
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Quantifying landscape connectivity through the use of connectivity response curves
Author(s)
Ernst, BW
Year
2014
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Landscape Ecology
ISSN:
0921-2973
EISSN:
1572-9761
Volume
29
Issue
6
Page Numbers
963-978
DOI
10.1007/s10980-014-0046-7
Web of Science Id
WOS:000338331600004
Abstract
Habitat connectivity is an essential component of biodiversity conservation. Simulated landscapes were manipulated to quantify the impact of changes to the amount, fragmentation and dispersion of habitat on a widely applied landscape connectivity metric, the probability of connectivity index. Index results for different landscape scenarios were plotted against the dispersal distances used for their calculation to create connectivity response curves for each scenario. Understanding index response to controlled changes in landscape structure at a range of spatial scales can be used to give context to comparison of alternative landscape management scenarios. Increased amounts of habitat, decreased fragmentation and decreased inter-patch distances resulted in increased connectivity index values. Connectivity response curves demonstrated increases in assessed connectivity for scenarios with continuous corridors or "stepping stone" connectors. The sensitivity of connectivity response curves to controlled changes in landscape structure indicate that this approach is able to detect and distinguish between different types of landscape changes, but that delineation of habitat and method of quantifying dispersal probability incorporate assumptions that must be recognized when interpreting results to guide landscape management. Representing landscape connectivity in this manner allows for the impacts of alternative landscape management strategies to be compared visually through comparative plots, or statistically through the parameters that describe connectivity response curves.
Keywords
Landscape connectivity; Graph theory; Landscape metrics
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