Sustaining forest landscape connectivity under different land cover change scenarios
Managing forest landscapes to sustain functional connectivity is considered one of the key strategies to counteract
the negative effects of climate and human-induced changes in forest species pools. With this objective, we
evaluated whether a robust network of forest connecting elements can be identified so that it remains efficient when
facing different types of potential land cover changes that may affect forest habitat networks and ecological fluxes.
For this purpose we considered changes both in the forested areas and in the non-forest intervening landscape matrix.
We combined some of the most recent developments in graph theory with models of land cover permeability and
least-cost analysis through the forest landscape. We focused on a case of study covering the habitat of a forestdwelling
bird (nuthatch, Sitta europaea) in the region of Galicia (NW Spain). Seven land-use change scenarios were
analysed for their effects on connecting forest elements (patches and links): one was the simplest case in which the
landscape is represented as a binary forest/non-forest pattern (and where matrix heterogeneity is disregarded), four
scenarios in which forest lands were converted to other cover types (to scrubland due to wildfires, to extensive and
intensive agriculture, and to urban areas), and two scenarios that only involved changes in the non-forested matrix
(renaturalization and intensification). Our results show that while the network of connecting elements for the species
was very robust to the conversion of the forest habitat patches to different cover types, the different change scenarios
in the landscape matrix could more significantly weaken its long-term validity and effectiveness. This is
particularly the case when most of the key connectivity providers for the nuthatch are located outside the protected
areas or public forests in Galicia, where biodiversity-friendly measures might be more easily implemented.
We discuss how the methodology can be applied to a wide range of forest landscape management situations, where
both the conservation of the forest critical areas and an adequate management of the landscape matrix between
them are of concern to achieve the sustainability of the ecological flows and ecosystem services at the wider forest
landscape scale.
RUBIO L;
RODRIGUEZ FREIRE Monica;
MATEO-SANCHEZ M.C.;
ESTREGUIL Christine;
SAURA Santiago;
2012-11-08
INST NACIONAL INVESTIGACION TECHNOLOGIA AGRARIA ALIMENTARIA
JRC75601
2171-5068,
http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/fs/article/view/2568/1683,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC75601,
10.5424/fs/2012212-02568,
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