首页> 外文学位 >The effects of urbanization on reptiles and amphibians in the sandhills region of North Carolina.
【24h】

The effects of urbanization on reptiles and amphibians in the sandhills region of North Carolina.

机译:城市化对北卡罗来纳州沙丘地区爬行动物和两栖动物的影响。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

Rapid urbanization threatens the survival of native wildlife species worldwide. In order to fully grasp the implications of the ongoing growth of urban areas on biodiversity, conservationists need to be able to quantify the response patterns of a wide range of different species to the expansion of urban and suburban land use. In this study, we set up two road-based transects across gradients of urbanization and habitat loss in the diverse longleaf pine forests of the Sandhills region of North Carolina, USA. With funding provided by the NC Wildlife Resources Commission, we drove the transects repeatedly at night in the field seasons of 2006-2008, tallying all vertebrate animals encountered (live or dead). The first transect (driven in all three years; 75 km long) ran from the urban areas of Southern Pines and Pinehurst down to the remote and relatively pristine habitats associated with the state-owned Sandhills Gamelands. The second transect (driven in 2007 and partially in 2008; 69 km long) began at the terminus of the first transect in the Gamelands, and then stretched down to the urban zones of Hamlet and Rockingham.;A total of 4900 vertebrate animals representing 69 species were observed on or near the road routes after driving a total of 16,625 km. This total includes 592 nightjars (ground-nesting nocturnal birds; e.g. whip-poor-wills) that we heard while driving the transects. In addition, in 2007 we surveyed for the nightjars and for quail (a high-priority game species that also nests on the ground) using 75 point count locations evenly distributed along the northern road route.;Regression tree analysis (a robust, nonparametric technique with minimal assumptions) was used to model the animal observation rates for a given 1 km road segment or point count as a function of various habitat variables measured within corresponding buffer zones for each segment. We also modeled snake and bird encounter rates as a function of mesopredator mammal observations.;Our results reveal that amphibian, snake, and ground-nesting bird observation rates are negatively associated with increasing levels of traffic and impervious surface. Conversely, mesopredator mammals (and domestic cats in particular) responded slightly positively to increasing urbanization, and negatively to protected area coverage. Both ground-nesting birds and snakes showed signs of negative correlations with mesopredator encounter rates, although these trends were not always significant due to high variability in the mesopredator data.;In order to try and confirm the results of the regression tree analyses, we also used a multivariate ordination approach (non-metric multidimensional scaling) to visualize the integrated community structure of all of the major vertebrate groups we observed in the Sandhills. The ordinations revealed that while the snake, ground-nesting bird, and amphibian groups were similar to each other in terms of their avoidance of urban conditions, the cats and native mesopredator species actually seemed to define widely divergent axes of community variation. Cats in particular were separated from the other groups on 2 out of 3 axes of the species-space ordination. Still, as we noted above for the regression tree models, it is difficult to sort out with our correlative data set whether cats and other mesopredators truly played an independent role in structuring and/or depleting the other wildlife guilds along our route. More experimental approaches are recommended for trying to resolve whether overabundant predators or road mortality and inappropriate habitat are more to blame for the much reduced encounter rates we observed for the snakes, birds, and amphibians in urban areas. Future studies will also be needed to confirm the logical assumption that road encounter rates provide a reasonably accurate index of the relative abundance of the different animal groups along the survey routes.
机译:快速的城市化威胁着世界各地野生动植物的生存。为了充分把握城市地区持续增长对生物多样性的影响,保护主义者需要能够量化各种不同物种对城市和郊区土地利用扩展的反应方式。在这项研究中,我们在美国北卡罗来纳州桑德希尔斯地区的长叶松树林中,建立了跨越城市化和栖息地丧失梯度的两个基于道路的样带。在北卡罗莱纳州野生动物资源委员会的资助下,我们在2006年至2008年的野外季节晚上反复开车横断样带,记录了遇到的所有脊椎动物(活着的或死去的)。第一个横断面(在所有三年中行驶;长75公里)从南部松树和派恩赫斯特市区一直到与国有的Sandhills Gamelands相关的偏远且相对原始的栖息地。第二个样带线(于2007年驱动,部分于2008年驱动;长69公里)始于Gamelands中第一个样带线的终点,然后延伸到哈姆雷特和罗金厄姆市区;共有4900只脊椎动物(代表69种)总共行驶了16,625公里后,在公路上或附近观察到树种。这个总数包括我们在驾驶横断面时听到的592个夜莺(夜间筑巢的夜鸟;例如鞭鞭意愿)。此外,在2007年,我们使用了沿北部道路均匀分布的75个点的位置,对夜莺和鹌鹑(也优先嵌套在地面上的高优先级猎物)进行了调查;回归树分析(一种可靠的非参数技术)在最小假设的前提下)用于模拟给定1 km道路路段或点数的动物观测率,作为每个路段相应缓冲区内测得的各种栖息地变量的函数。我们还对蛇和鸟的遭遇率进行了建模,将其作为中观哺乳动物观测的函数。我们的结果表明,两栖,蛇和地面筑巢的鸟的观测率与交通量的增加和不透水的面呈负相关。相反,中小型哺乳动物(尤其是家猫)对日益增长的城市化做出了积极响应,对保护区的覆盖率做出了负面响应。地面嵌套的鸟类和蛇类都显示出与中次繁殖者的发生率呈负相关的迹象,尽管由于中次繁殖者数据的高变异性,这些趋势并不总是很明显。为了尝试确定回归树分析的结果,我们还使用多元排序方法(非度量多维标度)来可视化我们在Sandhills中观察到的所有主要脊椎动物群体的综合群落结构。该法令表明,尽管在避免城市条件方面,蛇,地面鸟类和两栖动物彼此相似,但猫和本土中指物种实际上似乎定义了社区变异的大相径庭。特别是,猫在物种空间排序的3个轴中的2个轴上与其他组分开。但是,正如我们在上面针对回归树模型所指出的那样,很难用我们的相关数据集来确定猫和其他中指是否在构造和/或消灭沿途的其他野生动物行会中真正发挥了独立作用。我们建议采用更多的实验方法来尝试解决,我们发现城市中蛇,鸟和两栖动物的遭遇率大大降低是造成过度捕食者或道路死亡以及不适当栖息地的罪魁祸首。还需要进行进一步的研究,以确认逻辑上的假设,即道路遭遇率为调查路线上不同动物群体的相对丰度提供了一个合理准确的指标。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号