Landscape‐scale habitat assessment for an imperiled avian species

Animal Conservation
2018
Burkhalter, C.; Holloran, M.J.; Fedy, B.C.; Copeland, H.E.; Crabtree, R.L.; Michel, N.L.; Jay, S.C.; Rutledge, B.A.; Holloran, A.G.
PublisherWiley
Source N/A
Volume / Issue21/3
Pages241-251
Total Pages10 pages
Article Link
ISBN N/A
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/acv.12382
Editor(s) N/A
Conference / Book Title N/A
Flag N/A
Tagssage-grouse; landscape; landscape characteristics; habitat selection; habitat suitability; Bayesian; species abundance
Other N/A
Conference Title N/A
Conference Date N/A
Publication DateJanuary 10, 2018
Article Date N/A
GS Citation N/A
AbstractA comprehensive understanding of wildlife habitat suitability requires landscape‐scale assessments that provide the framework for subsequent integration with local‐scale relationships. To elucidate the functional role of habitat characteristics at large scales it is necessary to understand how abundance is related to important landscape characteristics. We estimated male greater sage‐grouse Centrocercus urophasianus abundance on leks relative to sagebrush availability, landscape connectivity and anthropogenic infrastructure densities within landscapes surrounding leks from 2006 to 2013 using binomial N‐mixture models. We focused on Wyoming, as the state will play a critical role in the long‐term persistence of greater sage‐grouse due to its relatively robust populations, widespread sagebrush habitats and innovative, large‐scale conservation approaches. Landscapes associated with higher abundance of males on leks were characterized as highly connected, sagebrush‐dominated areas with limited energy development. These modeled relationships were used to evaluate spatial and temporal changes in the landscape‐scale integrity of areas supporting the majority of the greater sage‐grouse populations in Wyoming (i.e. core areas). By assessing relative changes in abundance over time, our models indicated that most of the habitat within core areas (86%) exhibited landscape conditions conducive to supporting medium or large greater sage‐grouse populations that were stable or increasing through time. Larger populations were associated with larger, more centrally located core areas. Conversely, core areas supporting relatively small or declining populations were located along range margins in the eastern portion of the state. The landscape‐scale habitat relationships we developed can be used in combination with local‐scale assessments to generate a more complete picture of greater sage‐grouse habitat suitability.
Created: 8/9/2018 4:40 PM (ET)
Modified: 9/7/2018 11:10 AM (ET)
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