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Fragmentation in Landscape -Review

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Case 7.2 (A) Degree of fragmentation of major river basins of the world ... and reserve large patches of primeval forest in the landscape for maintenances ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fragmentation in Landscape -Review


1
  • EEES4760/6760
  • Landscape Ecology
  • Jiquan chen
  • Feb. 25, 2009
  • Fragmentation
  • Island Biogeographic Theory (IBT)

2
1km
50 m
1km
30 m
81 ha 69 ha 59 ha
3
Case 7.2 (A) Degree of fragmentation of major
river basins of the world
4
7.4 A fragmentation sequence
5
7.8 A constellation of separate habitat patches
may be critical to the survival of individuals or
populations
6
7.9 Many animals require a suite of different
habitats or resources to meet life history needs
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7.13 Roads can be significant barriers to the
movement of small vertebrates and invertebrates
10
EFFECTS OF FRAGMENTATION
  • Landscape structure
  • Patch density
  • Patch size
  • Inter-patch distance
  • Connectivity
  • Boundary length
  • Interior/edge ratio
  • Maximum of core (interior forest)
  • Total interior
  • Stepping stones
  • Corridors
  • Species
  • Isolation
  • Number of generalist
  • Exotic species
  • Nest predation
  • Extinction rate
  • Others
  • Metapopulation dynamics
  • Genetic inbreeding
  • Size of disturbance patches
  • Cumulative effects (rain, snow and flooding
    effects)

11
The Checkerboard Landscape
Patterns of clearcutting development under
various models(a-c) Progression of clearcutting
using the dispersed patch model in which areas
are selected for cutting so as to be distributed
regularly across the landscape shown are 25, 50,
and 75 cutover points. (e-f) Pattern of cutting
at 50 point using single, four nucleus, and
aggressive-parallel cutting systems. (Franklin
Forman 1987)
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13
Creating Land Mosaics
14
An old-growth patch surrounded by a long rotation
island that is cut in a programmed sequence such
( Harris 1984).
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16
  • Conclusions
  • The number, size, and arrangement of the patches
    in a mosaic created by forest managers strongly
    influence the degree to which management
    objectives are fulfilled.
  • Two recommendations are (1) reduce the emphasis
    on dispersing small clearcut patches through the
    forest landscape, and (2) identify and reserve
    large patches of primeval forest in the landscape
    for maintenances of interior and amenity values.
  • SLOSS debate

17
What do we want to know about fragmentation?
  • What are the relationships among patch area,
    shape, isolation, edge, the interaction of these
    factors, and various population and ecosystem?
  • How do various landscape elements (e.g.,
    corridors, linear networks, and matrix) affect
    ecosystem processes and the connectivity of
    populations in fragmented landscapes?
  • How do pattern-process linkages function in
    spatially and temporally dynamic landscapes
    across the range of spatial and temporal scales?
  • What levels of habitat loss and fragmentation
    does population viability decline drastically?
  • How long does it take population and ecosystem
    processes to respond to physical changes in the
    landscape associated with fragmentation?

18
Island Biogeographic Theory
  • Early interest in habitat fragmentation arose
    from island biogeographic theory (MacArthur
    Wilson 1963 1967).

(MacArthur and Wilson, 1963)
19
19.4 fish 1982
(Preston, 1962 Nilsson et al. 1988)
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19.3 mammal 1989
21
  • The equilibrium model of island biogeography by
    MacArthur and Wilson (1963)

22
Manipulative and Mensurative Experiment- Two
Major Approaches -
  • Manipulative experiment
  • Physically manipulates some attribute of the
    system in a controlled manner, while holding all
    other attributes constant.
  • Mensurative experiment
  • Simply observes or measures the system at
    different locations or times
  • The treatment is the different conditions in
    space or time.

23
  • Generally, manipulative experiments lead to
    stronger inferences and therefore more reliable
    knowledge than mensurative experiments.
  • An ideal manipulative experiment requires
  • The similarity among landscape minimizes the
    experimental error
  • The size of the landscape are functionally
    relevant to the process/organism(s) under
    consideration
  • Areal extent and configuration manipulation is
    needed to assess independent and interactive of
    processes
  • Replication and random
  • Temporal and spatial controls (natural
    variability)
  • Observing the delayed effect

24
Mensurative Experiment
  • Can overcome some of the important limitations
  • The practical and logistical difficulties of
    implementing large-scale treatment
  • No practical limit to the spatial or temporal
    scale of the study system
  • Flexibility in time lag effect
  • Still problems
  • Additional sources of variation associated with
    inconsistent and uncontrolled past perturbations
  • Lack in pretreatment control owing to
    substituting space for time inherent
    variability and autocorrelation

25
Lack in
  • Landscape level study
  • Isolation of a process
  • Extinction threshold/ time lag/ synergisms
    between habitat area and configuration
  • Inequity in the organismal focus
  • Invertebrates, reptiles, and amphibians
  • Replication / poorly controlled
  • Spatial information
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