Título : Problems seeded in the past: lagged effects of historical
land-use changes can cause an extinction debt in long-lived
species due to movement limitation |
Autor : Jiménez Franco, María Victoria gracia, eva Rodríguez-Caro, Roberto Anadón Herrera, José Daniel Wiegand, Thorsten Botella Robles, Francisco Giménez, Andrés |
Editor : Springer |
Departamento: Departamentos de la UMH::Biología Aplicada |
Fecha de publicación: 2022-01 |
URI : https://hdl.handle.net/11000/31058 |
Resumen :
Context Land-use change is one of the main threats
to biodiversity on the global scale. Legacy effects of
historical land-use changes may affect population
dynamics of long-lived species, but they are difficult
to evaluate through observational studies alone. We
present here an interdisciplinary modelling approach
as an alternative to address this problem in landscape
ecology. Objectives Assess effects of agricultural abandonment
and anthropisation on the population dynamics
of long-lived species. Specifically, we evaluated:
(a) how changes in movement patterns caused by
land-use change might impact population dynamics;
(b) time-lag responses of demographic variables in
relation to land-use changes.
Methods We applied an individual-based and spatial-
explicit simulation model of the spur-tighed
tortoise (Testudo graeca), an endangered species, to
sequences of real-world landscape changes representing
agricultural abandonment and anthropisation at the
local scale. We analysed different demographic variables and compared an ‘‘impact scenario’’ (i.e.,
historical land-use changes) with a ‘‘control scenario’’
(no land-use changes).
Results While agricultural abandonment did not lead
to relevant changes in demographic variables,
anthropisation negatively affected the reproductive
rate, population density and the extinction probability
with time-lag responses of 20, 30 and 130 years,
respectively, and caused an extinction debt of 22%.
Conclusions We provide an understanding of how
changes in animal movement driven by land-use
changes can translate into lagged impacts on demography
and, ultimately, on population viability. Implementation
of proactive mitigation management are
needed to promote landscape connectivity, especially
for long-lived species for which first signatures of an
extinction debt may arise only after decades.
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Palabras clave/Materias: Agricultural abandonment Individualbased model Landscape scenarios Population viability Testudo graeca |
Área de conocimiento : CDU: Ciencias puras y naturales: Biología: Biología general y teórica |
Tipo documento : application/pdf |
Derechos de acceso: info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-021-01388-3 |
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos Biología Aplicada
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