4.5 Article

The spatial links tool: Automated mapping of habitat linkages in variegated landscapes

Journal

ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
Volume 200, Issue 3-4, Pages 403-411

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2006.08.017

Keywords

habitat corridors; spatial habitat modelling; connectivity; metapopulation ecology; variegated landscapes; least cost paths

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The removal, alteration and fragmentation of habitat in many parts of the world has led to a loss of biodiversity. Within the prevailing societal limitations the process is not easily reversed. Attempts are being made to minimise the fragmentation of remaining habitat by strategically reversing or managing habitat loss. Although their relative usefulness is a topic of debate among ecologists, habitat corridors are seen as one way of maintaining spatially dependent ecological processes within landscapes where habitat has been seriously depleted. Corridors can only be effective if they significantly contribute to the species sustaining processes of gene flow, resource access or the colonisation of vacant patches. We present a spatial habitat modelling methodology for evaluating the contribution and potential contribution of connecting paths to landscape connectivity. We have developed the spatial links tool (SLT), which maps link value across a region. The SLT combines connectivity measures from metapopulation ecology with the least cost path algorithm from graph theory, and can be applied to continuously variable landscape data. Combined with expert judgement, link value maps can be used to delineate habitat corridors. The approach capitalises on some synergies between ecological relevance and computational efficiency to produce an easily applied heuristic tool that has been successfully applied in NSW Australia. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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