4.7 Article

The contribution of roadsides to connect grassland habitat patches for butterflies in landscapes of contrasting permeability

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 311, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.114846

Keywords

Corridors; Generalists; Landscape management; Road verges; Specialists; Stepping-stones

Funding

  1. Conference of European Directors of Roads (CEDR) Transnational Road Research Programme [31133480]
  2. FCT [CEECIND/03798/2017]
  3. JdC-Formacion [FJCI-2016-29,182]

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High-value roadsides play an important role in improving landscape permeability. Increasing the ratio of high-value roadsides can enhance both structural and functional connectivity in landscapes with low permeability. In landscapes with high permeability, roadsides only support movement of specialized species. Therefore, land management should focus on the preservation and restoration of semi-natural grasslands.
Roadsides, in particular those being species-rich and of conservation value, are considered to improve landscape permeability by providing corridors among habitat patches and by facilitating species' dispersal. However, little is known about the potential connectivity offered by such high-value roadsides. Using circuit theory, we modelled connectivity provided by high-value roadsides in landscapes with low or high permeability in southcentral Sweden, with 'permeability' being measured by the area of semi-natural grasslands. We modelled structural connectivity and, for habitat generalists and specialists, potential functional connectivity focusing on butterflies. We further assessed in which landscapes grassland connectivity is best enhanced through measures for expanding the area of high-value roadsides. Structural connectivity provided by high-value roadsides resulted in similar patterns to those of a functional approach, in which we modelled habitat generalists. In landscapes with low permeability, all target species showed higher movements within compared to between grasslands using high-value roadsides. In landscapes with high permeability, grassland generalists and specialists showed the same patterns, whereas for habitat generalists, connectivity provided by high-value roadsides and grasslands was similar. Increasing the ratio of high-value roadsides can thus enhance structural and functional connectivity in landscapes with low permeability. In contrast, in landscapes with high permeability, roadsides only supported movement of specialised species. Continuous segments of high-value roadsides are most efficient to increase connectivity for specialists, whereas generalists can utilize also short segments of high-value roadsides acting as stepping-stones. Thus, land management should focus on the preservation and restoration of existing seminatural grasslands. Management for enhancing grassland connectivity through high-value roadsides should aim at maintaining and creating high-value roadside vegetation, preferably in long continuous segments, especially in landscapes with low permeability.

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