Value of semi-open corridors for simultaneously connecting open and wooded habitats: A case study with ground beetles

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Value of semi-open corridors for simultaneously connecting open and wooded habitats : A case study with ground beetles. / Eggers, Britta; Matern, Andrea; Drees, Claudia et al.

In: Conservation Biology, Vol. 24, No. 1, 02.2010, p. 256-266.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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@article{e9b303b5f64648c59e0222e719fcf4ed,
title = "Value of semi-open corridors for simultaneously connecting open and wooded habitats: A case study with ground beetles",
abstract = "To counteract habitat fragmentation, the connectivity of a landscape should be enhanced. Corridors are thought to facilitate movement between disconnected patches of habitat, and linear strips of habitat connecting isolated patches are a popular type of corridor. On the other hand, the creation of new corridors can lead to fragmentation of the surrounding habitat. For example, heathland corridors connect patches of heathland and alternatively hedgerows connect patches of woodland. Nevertheless, these corridors themselves also break up previously connected patches of their surrounding habitat and in so doing fragment another type of habitat (heathland corridors fragment woodlands and woodland strips or hedgerows fragment heathlands). To overcome this challenge we propose the use of semi-open habitats (a mixture of heathland and woodland vegetation) as conservation corridors to enable dispersal of both stenotopic heathland and woodland species. We used two semi-open corridors with a mosaic of heathland and woody vegetation to investigate the efficiency of semi-open corridors for species dispersal and to assess whether these corridors might be a suitable approach for nature conservation. We conducted a mark-recapture study on three stenotopic flightless carabid beetles of heathlands and woodlands and took an inventory of all the carabid species in two semi-open corridors. Both methodological approaches showed simultaneous immigration of woodland and heathland species in the semi-open corridor. Detrended correspondence analysis showed a clear separation of the given habitats and affirmed that semi-open corridors are a good strategy for connecting woodlands and heathlands. The best means of creating and preserving semi-open corridors is probably through extensive grazing.",
keywords = "Biology, carabid beetle, connectivity, corridor, forest, fragmentation, Carabid beetle, Connectivity, Corridor, Forest, Fragmentation",
author = "Britta Eggers and Andrea Matern and Claudia Drees and Jan Eggers and Werner Haerdtle and Thorsten A{\ss}mann",
year = "2010",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01295.x",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "256--266",
journal = "Conservation Biology",
issn = "0888-8892",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Value of semi-open corridors for simultaneously connecting open and wooded habitats

T2 - A case study with ground beetles

AU - Eggers, Britta

AU - Matern, Andrea

AU - Drees, Claudia

AU - Eggers, Jan

AU - Haerdtle, Werner

AU - Aßmann, Thorsten

PY - 2010/2

Y1 - 2010/2

N2 - To counteract habitat fragmentation, the connectivity of a landscape should be enhanced. Corridors are thought to facilitate movement between disconnected patches of habitat, and linear strips of habitat connecting isolated patches are a popular type of corridor. On the other hand, the creation of new corridors can lead to fragmentation of the surrounding habitat. For example, heathland corridors connect patches of heathland and alternatively hedgerows connect patches of woodland. Nevertheless, these corridors themselves also break up previously connected patches of their surrounding habitat and in so doing fragment another type of habitat (heathland corridors fragment woodlands and woodland strips or hedgerows fragment heathlands). To overcome this challenge we propose the use of semi-open habitats (a mixture of heathland and woodland vegetation) as conservation corridors to enable dispersal of both stenotopic heathland and woodland species. We used two semi-open corridors with a mosaic of heathland and woody vegetation to investigate the efficiency of semi-open corridors for species dispersal and to assess whether these corridors might be a suitable approach for nature conservation. We conducted a mark-recapture study on three stenotopic flightless carabid beetles of heathlands and woodlands and took an inventory of all the carabid species in two semi-open corridors. Both methodological approaches showed simultaneous immigration of woodland and heathland species in the semi-open corridor. Detrended correspondence analysis showed a clear separation of the given habitats and affirmed that semi-open corridors are a good strategy for connecting woodlands and heathlands. The best means of creating and preserving semi-open corridors is probably through extensive grazing.

AB - To counteract habitat fragmentation, the connectivity of a landscape should be enhanced. Corridors are thought to facilitate movement between disconnected patches of habitat, and linear strips of habitat connecting isolated patches are a popular type of corridor. On the other hand, the creation of new corridors can lead to fragmentation of the surrounding habitat. For example, heathland corridors connect patches of heathland and alternatively hedgerows connect patches of woodland. Nevertheless, these corridors themselves also break up previously connected patches of their surrounding habitat and in so doing fragment another type of habitat (heathland corridors fragment woodlands and woodland strips or hedgerows fragment heathlands). To overcome this challenge we propose the use of semi-open habitats (a mixture of heathland and woodland vegetation) as conservation corridors to enable dispersal of both stenotopic heathland and woodland species. We used two semi-open corridors with a mosaic of heathland and woody vegetation to investigate the efficiency of semi-open corridors for species dispersal and to assess whether these corridors might be a suitable approach for nature conservation. We conducted a mark-recapture study on three stenotopic flightless carabid beetles of heathlands and woodlands and took an inventory of all the carabid species in two semi-open corridors. Both methodological approaches showed simultaneous immigration of woodland and heathland species in the semi-open corridor. Detrended correspondence analysis showed a clear separation of the given habitats and affirmed that semi-open corridors are a good strategy for connecting woodlands and heathlands. The best means of creating and preserving semi-open corridors is probably through extensive grazing.

KW - Biology

KW - carabid beetle

KW - connectivity

KW - corridor

KW - forest

KW - fragmentation

KW - Carabid beetle

KW - Connectivity

KW - Corridor

KW - Forest

KW - Fragmentation

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=74549145078&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01295.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01295.x

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 24

SP - 256

EP - 266

JO - Conservation Biology

JF - Conservation Biology

SN - 0888-8892

IS - 1

ER -