The spatial scaling of habitat selection by African elephants

被引:83
作者
de Knegt, Henrik J. [1 ]
van Langevelde, Frank [1 ]
Skidmore, Andrew K. [2 ]
Delsink, Audrey [3 ]
Slotow, Rob [3 ]
Henley, Steve [4 ,5 ]
Bucini, Gabriela [6 ]
de Boer, WillemF. [1 ]
Coughenour, Michael B. [6 ]
Grant, Cornelia C. [7 ]
Heitkonig, Ignas M. A. [1 ]
Henley, Michelle [4 ,5 ]
Knox, Nicky M. [2 ]
Kohi, Edward M. [1 ]
Mwakiwa, Emmanuel [1 ]
Page, Bruce R. [3 ]
Peel, Mike [8 ]
Pretorius, Yolanda [1 ]
van Wieren, Sipke E. [1 ]
Prins, Herbert H. T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Wageningen Univ, Resource Ecol Grp, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands
[2] Univ Twente, Fac Geoinformat Sci & Earth Observat, NL-7500 AA Enschede, Netherlands
[3] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Biol & Conservat Sci, ZA-4000 Durban, South Africa
[4] Univ S Africa, Sch Environm Sci, Appl Behav Ecol & Ecosyst Res Unit, ZA-1710 Florida, South Africa
[5] Save Elephants, Transboundary Elephant Res Programme, ZA-1380 Hoedspruit, South Africa
[6] Colorado State Univ, Nat Resource Ecol Lab, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[7] Sci Serv, ZA-1350 Skukuza, South Africa
[8] ARC Range & Forage Inst, ZA-1200 Nelspruit, South Africa
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
distribution; environmental context; habitat suitability; Kruger National Park; Loxodonta africana; model prediction; niche modelling; scale; NATIONAL-PARK; HERBIVORES; LANDSCAPE; PATTERNS; HETEROGENEITY; MANAGEMENT; VEGETATION; RESPONSES; ECOLOGY; DENSITY;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2656.2010.01764.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
P>1. Understanding and accurately predicting the spatial patterns of habitat use by organisms is important for ecological research, biodiversity conservation and ecosystem management. However, this understanding is complicated by the effects of spatial scale, because the scale of analysis affects the quantification of species-environment relationships. 2. We therefore assessed the influence of environmental context (i.e. the characteristics of the landscape surrounding a site), varied over a large range of scales (i.e. ambit radii around focal sites), on the analysis and prediction of habitat selection by African elephants in Kruger National Park, South Africa. 3. We focused on the spatial scaling of the elephants' response to their main resources, forage and water, and found that the quantification of habitat selection strongly depended on the scales at which environmental context was considered. Moreover, the inclusion of environmental context at characteristic scales (i.e. those at which habitat selectivity was maximized) increased the predictive capacity of habitat suitability models. 4. The elephants responded to their environment in a scale-dependent and perhaps hierarchical manner, with forage characteristics driving habitat selection at coarse spatial scales, and surface water at fine spatial scales. 5. Furthermore, the elephants exhibited sexual habitat segregation, mainly in relation to vegetation characteristics. Male elephants preferred areas with high tree cover and low herbaceous biomass, whereas this pattern was reversed for female elephants. 6. We show that the spatial distribution of elephants can be better understood and predicted when scale-dependent species-environment relationships are explicitly considered. This demonstrates the importance of considering the influence of spatial scale on the analysis of spatial patterning in ecological phenomena.
引用
收藏
页码:270 / 281
页数:12
相关论文
共 63 条
[1]   The effect of the extent of the study region on GIS models of species geographic distributions and estimates of niche evolution: preliminary tests with montane rodents (genus Nephelomys) in Venezuela [J].
Anderson, Robert P. ;
Raza, Ali .
JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2010, 37 (07) :1378-1393
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2007, WORLDCLIM VERSION 1
[3]   Five (or so) challenges for species distribution modelling [J].
Araujo, Miguel B. ;
Guisan, Antoine .
JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2006, 33 (10) :1677-1688
[4]   Assessing habitat selection using multivariate statistics: Some refinements of the ecological-niche factor analysis [J].
Basille, Mathieu ;
Calenge, Clement ;
Marboutin, Eric ;
Andersen, Reidar ;
Gaillard, Jean-Michel .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2008, 211 (1-2) :233-240
[5]   Evaluating resource selection functions [J].
Boyce, MS ;
Vernier, PR ;
Nielsen, SE ;
Schmiegelow, FKA .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2002, 157 (2-3) :281-300
[6]  
Brown Joel S., 2007, P437
[7]  
Bucini G., 2010, Ecosystem function in savannas: measurement and modeling at landscape to global scales, P219
[8]   The factorial decomposition of the Mahalanobis distances in habitat selection studies [J].
Calenge, C. ;
Darmon, G. ;
Basille, M. ;
Loison, A. ;
Jullien, J. -M. .
ECOLOGY, 2008, 89 (02) :555-566
[9]   A general framework for the statistical exploration of the ecological niche [J].
Calenge, Clement ;
Basille, Mathieu .
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 2008, 252 (04) :674-685
[10]   The package "adehabitat" for the R software: A tool for the analysis of space and habitat use by animals [J].
Calenge, Clement .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2006, 197 (3-4) :516-519