Using spatial simulations of habitat modification for adaptive management of protected areas: Mediterranean grassland modification by woody plant encroachment

Authors:Mairota, PaolaLeronni, VincenzoXi, WeiminMladenoff, David J.Nagendra, Harini

Source:ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION

Volume:41

DOI:10.1017/S037689291300043X

Published:2014

Document Type:Review

Abstract:Spatial simulation may be used to model the potential effects of current biodiversity approaches on future habitat modification under differing climate change scenarios. To illustrate the approach, spatial simulation models, including landscape-level forest dynamics, were developed for a semi-natural grassland of conservation concern in a southern Italian protected area, which was exposed to woody vegetation encroachment. A forest landscape dynamics simulator (LANDIS-II) under conditions of climate change, current fire and alternative management regimes was used to develop scenario maps. Landscape pattern metrics provided data on fragmentation and habitat quality degradation, and quantified the spatial spread of different tree species within grassland habitats. The models indicated that approximately one-third of the grassland area would be impacted by loss, fragmentation and degradation in the next 150 years. Differing forest management regimes appear to influence the type of encroaching species and the density of encroaching vegetation. Habitat modifications are likely to affect species distribution and interactions, as well as local ecosystem functioning, leading to changes in estimated conservation value. A site-scale conservation strategy based on feasible integrated fire and forest management options is proposed, considering the debate on the effectiveness of protected areas for the conservation of ecosystem services in a changing climate. This needs to be tested through further modelling and scenario analysis, which would benefit from the enhancement of current modelling capabilities of LANDIS-II and from combination with remote sensing technologies, to provide early signals of environmental shifts both within and outside protected areas.

Author Information

Corresponding Author:

Reprint Address:Mairota, P (corresponding author), Univ Bari, DISAAT, Aldo Moro Via Orabona 4, I-70126 Bari, Italy.

Addresses:[Mairota, Paola; Leronni, Vincenzo] Univ Bari, DISAAT, I-70126 Bari, Italy. [Xi, Weimin; Mladenoff, David J.] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Forest & Wildlife Ecol, Madison, WI 53706 USA. [Xi, Weimin] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Biol & Hlth Sci, Kingsville, TX 78363 USA. [Nagendra, Harini] Ashoka Trust Res Ecol & Environm, Bangalore 560064, Karnataka, India.

E-mail Addresses:paola.mairota@uniba.it

Note
The information comes from publicly available information on the Internet.
This service only provides full-text access links. And the specific full-text access permissions depend on whether articles are OA resources or user IP permissions.