Predicting potential European bison habitat across its former range

被引:69
|
作者
Kuemmerle, Tobias [1 ,2 ]
Radeloff, Volker C. [1 ]
Perzanowski, Kajetan [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Kozlo, Piotr [6 ]
Sipko, Taras [7 ]
Khoyetskyy, Pavlo [8 ]
Bashta, Andriy-Taras [9 ]
Chikurova, Evgenia [7 ]
Parnikoza, Ivan [10 ]
Baskin, Leonid [7 ]
Angelstam, Per [11 ]
Waller, Donald M. [12 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Forest & Wildlife Ecol, Madison, WI 53706 USA
[2] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, D-14412 Potsdam, Germany
[3] Catholic Univ, Dept Appl Ecol, PL-20708 Lublin, Poland
[4] Polish Acad Sci, Museum Zool, PL-38700 Ustrzyki Dolne, Poland
[5] Polish Acad Sci, Inst Zool, PL-38700 Ustrzyki Dolne, Poland
[6] Natl Acad Sci Belarus, Sci & Pract Ctr Bioresources, Minsk 22070, BELARUS
[7] Russian Acad Sci, AN Severtsov Inst Ecol & Evolut, Moscow 119071, Russia
[8] Ukrainian Natl Univ Forest Technol, Lvov, Ukraine
[9] Natl Acad Sci Ukraine, Inst Ecol Carpathians, UA-79026 Lvov, Ukraine
[10] Natl Acad Sci Ukraine, Inst Mol Biol & Genet, UA-03680 Kiev, Ukraine
[11] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Sch Forest Engineers, Fac Forest Sci, S-73921 Skinnskatteberg, Sweden
[12] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Bot, Madison, WI 53706 USA
关键词
Bison bonasus; broadscale conservation planning; Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union; habitat suitability; land use change; large herbivores; Maxent; species distribution modeling; wisent; SPECIES DISTRIBUTIONS; DISTRIBUTION MODELS; PROTECTED AREAS; FOREST; POPULATION; BONASUS; CONSERVATION; FUTURE; REINTRODUCTION; MANAGEMENT;
D O I
10.1890/10-0073.1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Habitat loss threatens large mammals worldwide, and their survival will depend on habitat in human-dominated landscapes. Conservation planners thus face the challenge to identify areas of least conflict with land use, yet broadscale species distribution models rarely incorporate real landscape patterns nor do they identify potential conservation conflicts. An excellent example of such conservation challenges is provided by European bison (Bison bonasus). Almost extinct by the early 20th century, bison can only survive in the wild if large metapopulations are established, but it is unclear where new herds can be reintroduced. Using European bison as an example we conducted a continental-scale habitat assessment based on real landscape patterns. Our specific aims here were to (1) map European bison habitat throughout the species' former range, (2) examine whether broadscale habitat suitability factors differ from previously reported fine-scale factors, and (3) assess where suitable habitat occurs in areas with low potential for conflict with land use. We assessed habitat suitability using herd range maps for all 36 free-ranging European bison herds as habitat use data. Habitat suitability maps were compared with maps of land cover, livestock density, agricultural constraints, and protected areas to assess potential conservation conflicts. Our models had high goodness of fit (AUC 0.941), and we found abundant potential bison habitat. European bison prefer mosaic-type landscapes, with a preference for broad-leaved and mixed forests. European bison metapopulations do not appear to be limited by habitat availability. However, most potential habitat occurred outside protected areas and has substantial potential for conservation conflicts. The most promising areas for establishing large bison metapopulations all occur in Eastern Europe (i.e., the Carpathians, the Belarus-Ukraine borderlands, and several regions in European Russia). The future of European bison and that of other large mammals in the wild thus clearly lies in Eastern Europe, because habitat there is most abundant and least fragmented, and because the potential for conflict with land use is lower. More generally we suggest that broadscale habitat assessments that incorporate land use can be powerful tools for conservation planning and will be key if large herbivore and carnivore conservation is to succeed in a human-dominated world.
引用
收藏
页码:830 / 843
页数:14
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