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habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

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Page 1: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

habitat interspersion –

Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Page 2: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion
Page 3: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Human Land Use Practices

Page 4: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

History of Landscape Ecology• “European School”

– roots back to those of ecology

– typing, classifying, naming

– landscape architecture, planning, designing

• “American School”– young = early 1980’s

– focus on natural systems

– theory & models, some field experiments

Page 5: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

What is Landscape Ecology?

• Meta-analysis of papers in Landscape Ecology (Wiens 1992) – 1st 5 yrs of journal– Most studies are large scale

(landscapes are big)– Most studies are descriptive or

conceptual– Experiments difficult to conduct,

thus modeling– Emphasis on vegetation pattern /

land use pattern– Humans = impt. part of systems

Page 6: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

What is Landscape Ecology?

• Hobbs (1997) – 2nd 5 years of Landscape Ecology– Less descriptive

studies– More “methods” and

modeling studies, no expts.

– More quantitative / statistical analysis (spatial stats)

Page 7: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Emergence of Landscape Ecology

Equilibrium View

Structure

Function

?

?

?

?

Page 8: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Emergence of Landscape Ecology

Dynamic View

Structure

Function

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Ecological Scaling: Scale & Pattern

• Acts in the “ecological theatre (Hutchinson 1965) played out across various scales of space & time

• To understand these dramas, one must select appropriate scale

Tem

pora

l Sca

le

Spatial ScaleFine

Sho

rt

Coarse

Lon

g

Recruitment

Treefalls

Windthrow

Secondary Succession

Species Migrations

SpeciationExtinction

Fire

Page 12: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Ecological Scaling: Scale & PatternA

mer

ican

Red

star

t

Least Flycatcher

Am

eric

an R

edst

art

Least Flycatcher

Local Scale(4 ha plots)

Regional Scale(thousands of ha)

Page 13: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Ecological Scaling: Definitions• Ecological scale & cartographic scale are exactly opposite

– Ecological scale =

– Cartographic scale =

Page 14: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Ecological Scaling: Components of Scale

• Grain = finest component of environment that can be differentiated up close

• Extent = range at which a relevant object can be distinguished from a fixed vantage point

Fine CoarseScale

ExtentGrain

Page 15: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Ecological Scaling: Components of Scale• )

Page 16: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Identifying the “Right” Scale(s)

• No clear algorithm for defining

• Autocorrelation & Independence • Life history correlates

• Dependent on objectives and organisms

• Multiscale analysis!

• e.g., Australian leadbeater’s possum

Page 17: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Multiscale Analysis

• Species-specific perception of landscape features : scale-dependent

– e.g., mesopredators in Indiana

• Modeling species distributions in fragmented landscapes

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Spatial and TemporalEcology of Raccoons

Page 19: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Gehring and Swihart. 2003. Biological Conservation109:283-295

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Brown and Litvaitis. 1995. Canadian Journal of Zoology 73:1005-1011

Page 21: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Hierarchy Theory

• Lower levels provide mechanistic explanations

• Higher levels provide constraints

Page 22: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Scale & Hierarchy Theory

• Hierarchical structure of systems = helps us explain phenomena

–Why? : next lower level

–So What? : next higher level

• minimum 3 hierarchical levels needed

Page 23: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Constraints (significance)

Level of Focus (level of interest)

Components (explanation)

Page 24: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Landscape PatternI. Landscape Components

(attributes of features or spatial elements)

landscape are comprised of:

- corridors

- patches

- matrix

Page 25: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Landscape PatternI. Landscape Components

(attributes of features or spatial elements)landscape are comprised of:

- corridors- patches- matrix

A. CompositionB. ConfigurationC. Connectivity

Relative to landscape spatial elements….

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How much of the area is comprised of each type of spatial element?How are spatial elements arranged in space?

How do these attributes change through time?

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How does one quantify landscape pattern?How do biotic communities interact with pattern?

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• Patch –

• Corridor

• Matrix –

Landscape Pattern Patch-Corridor-Matrix Model

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Landscape PatternPatches

Defining patches using vector data• Digitizing = delineating polygon patches using remotely-

sensed data (e.g., DOQ) based on visual interpretation of patch boundaries; subjective, but ground truthing needed

DOQ Vector Coverage

Page 33: Habitat interspersion – Leopold’s Law of Interspersion

Landscape PatternPatches

Defining patches using raster data• Satellite sensor = delineating pixel-shaped patches based on

spectral signatures; aggregating cells based on shared attributes

DOQ Raster Coverage

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• Patch boundaries meaningful only when referenced to particular scale & phenomenon; resolution impt., gradients or discrete boundaries?

Landscape Pattern Patches

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• Definition based on function…..

• Habitat – increase connectivity by providing breeding habitat…facilitate gene flow

• Facilitated Movement – increase connectivity by facilitating dispersal, migration, and/or range shifts

• Barrier or Filter – prohibit (barrier) or impede differentially (filter) movements

Landscape Pattern Corridors

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Facilitated Movement Corridors

Landscape Pattern Corridors

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Facilitated Movement Corridors

• Selectivity (s): degree of discrimination of possible pathways

• Resistance (k): survival cost per unit time spent in corridor

• Velocity (v): avg rate of movement through

• Final evaluation = immigration rate

Landscape Pattern Corridors

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Barriers & Filters

Landscape Pattern Corridors

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• Most abundant• Highest connectivity

Landscape Pattern Matrix

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