Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach

Assessments of landscape connectivity are increasingly required in natural resource management. Understanding how landscape structure affects the movement and dispersal of animals may be essential for ensuring the long-term persistence of species of conservation concern. Functional connectivity mode...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Galpern, Paul
Other Authors: Manseau, Micheline (Natural Resources Institute), Wilson, Paul (Natural Resources Institute) Piercey-Normore, Michele (Biological Sciences) Fortin, Daniel (Université Laval)
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/9224
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:MWU.1993/9224 2023-05-15T15:53:31+02:00 Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach Galpern, Paul Manseau, Micheline (Natural Resources Institute) Wilson, Paul (Natural Resources Institute) Piercey-Normore, Michele (Biological Sciences) Fortin, Daniel (Université Laval) 2012-09-28T22:07:36Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/9224 unknown Elsevier Wiley-Blackwell Galpern, P., M. Manseau, and A. Fall. (2011). Patch-based graphs of landscape connectivity: a guide to construction, analysis and application for conservation. Biological Conservation 144:44-55 Galpern, P., M. Manseau, P.J. Wilson. (2012). Grains of connectivity: analysis at multiple spatial scales in landscape genetics. Molecular Ecology. 21: 3996–4009. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/9224 landscape ecology natural resource management landscape connectivity landscape genetics 2012 ftcanadathes 2014-03-30T00:52:09Z Assessments of landscape connectivity are increasingly required in natural resource management. Understanding how landscape structure affects the movement and dispersal of animals may be essential for ensuring the long-term persistence of species of conservation concern. Functional connectivity models describing how features on the landscape influence animal movement behaviour have been produced in two different ways. The resistance surface models landscape connectivity as its inverse, the resistance to movement and dispersal, while the landscape graph represents landscape connectivity by describing the relationships among resource patches. Both methods have limitations that make them less effective for modelling highly-mobile and wide-ranging species such as ungulates and carnivores. This thesis develops a method called grains of connectivity that combines the continuous representation of landscape connectivity provided by resistance surfaces and the scalability provided by landscape graphs to create a flexible modelling framework for these species. The first half of the thesis reviews the conceptual origins of the grains of connectivity method and examines its properties using simulated landscapes. In the second half, empirical evidence of movement and dispersal in a boreal woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) population is used to validate functional connectivity hypotheses generated using the method. Connectivity for caribou at the temporal scale of generations is examined using a landscape genetics approach, while connectivity at the seasonal scale is assessed using the distribution of caribou telemetry locations. Grains of connectivity may be most useful for study systems where animals are not found exclusively in well-defined resource patches and there is uncertainty in the behavioural parameters influencing movement and dispersal. Additionally, the scalability of the analysis can be used to selectively remove spatial heterogeneity that may be uncorrelated with movement and dispersal giving an improved description of the pattern affecting the landscape connectivity process. Other/Unknown Material caribou Rangifer tarandus Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language unknown
topic landscape ecology
natural resource management
landscape connectivity
landscape genetics
spellingShingle landscape ecology
natural resource management
landscape connectivity
landscape genetics
Galpern, Paul
Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach
topic_facet landscape ecology
natural resource management
landscape connectivity
landscape genetics
description Assessments of landscape connectivity are increasingly required in natural resource management. Understanding how landscape structure affects the movement and dispersal of animals may be essential for ensuring the long-term persistence of species of conservation concern. Functional connectivity models describing how features on the landscape influence animal movement behaviour have been produced in two different ways. The resistance surface models landscape connectivity as its inverse, the resistance to movement and dispersal, while the landscape graph represents landscape connectivity by describing the relationships among resource patches. Both methods have limitations that make them less effective for modelling highly-mobile and wide-ranging species such as ungulates and carnivores. This thesis develops a method called grains of connectivity that combines the continuous representation of landscape connectivity provided by resistance surfaces and the scalability provided by landscape graphs to create a flexible modelling framework for these species. The first half of the thesis reviews the conceptual origins of the grains of connectivity method and examines its properties using simulated landscapes. In the second half, empirical evidence of movement and dispersal in a boreal woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) population is used to validate functional connectivity hypotheses generated using the method. Connectivity for caribou at the temporal scale of generations is examined using a landscape genetics approach, while connectivity at the seasonal scale is assessed using the distribution of caribou telemetry locations. Grains of connectivity may be most useful for study systems where animals are not found exclusively in well-defined resource patches and there is uncertainty in the behavioural parameters influencing movement and dispersal. Additionally, the scalability of the analysis can be used to selectively remove spatial heterogeneity that may be uncorrelated with movement and dispersal giving an improved description of the pattern affecting the landscape connectivity process.
author2 Manseau, Micheline (Natural Resources Institute)
Wilson, Paul (Natural Resources Institute) Piercey-Normore, Michele (Biological Sciences) Fortin, Daniel (Université Laval)
author Galpern, Paul
author_facet Galpern, Paul
author_sort Galpern, Paul
title Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach
title_short Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach
title_full Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach
title_fullStr Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach
title_full_unstemmed Modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach
title_sort modelling landscape connectivity for highly-mobile terrestrial animals: a continuous and scalable approach
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/9224
genre caribou
Rangifer tarandus
genre_facet caribou
Rangifer tarandus
op_relation Galpern, P., M. Manseau, and A. Fall. (2011). Patch-based graphs of landscape connectivity: a guide to construction, analysis and application for conservation. Biological Conservation 144:44-55
Galpern, P., M. Manseau, P.J. Wilson. (2012). Grains of connectivity: analysis at multiple spatial scales in landscape genetics. Molecular Ecology. 21: 3996–4009.
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/9224
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