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Value of protected areas to avian persistence across 20 years of climate and land-use change
Authors:Michelle A Peach  Jonathan B Cohen  Jacqueline L Frair  Benjamin Zuckerberg  Patrick Sullivan  William F Porter  Corey Lang
Affiliation:1. Department of Environment and Forest Biology, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, 1 Forestry Drive, Syracuse, NY 13210, U.S.A.;2. Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin Madison, 1630 Linden Drive, Rm 213, Madison, WI 53706, U.S.A.;3. Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, 111B Fernow Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, U.S.A.;4. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, 480 Wilson Road, East Lansing, MI 48824, U.S.A.;5. Environment and Natural Resource Economics, University of Rhode Island, 1 Greenhouse Road, Kingston, RI 02881, U.S.A.
Abstract:Establishing protected areas, where human activities and land cover changes are restricted, is among the most widely used strategies for biodiversity conservation. This practice is based on the assumption that protected areas buffer species from processes that drive extinction. However, protected areas can maintain biodiversity in the face of climate change and subsequent shifts in distributions have been questioned. We evaluated the degree to which protected areas influenced colonization and extinction patterns of 97 avian species over 20 years in the northeastern United States. We fitted single-visit dynamic occupancy models to data from Breeding Bird Atlases to quantify the magnitude of the effect of drivers of local colonization and extinction (e.g., climate, land cover, and amount of protected area) in heterogeneous landscapes that varied in the amount of area under protection. Colonization and extinction probabilities improved as the amount of protected area increased, but these effects were conditional on landscape context and species characteristics. In this forest-dominated region, benefits of additional land protection were greatest when both forest cover in a grid square and amount of protected area in neighboring grid squares were low. Effects did not vary with species’ migratory habit or conservation status. Increasing the amounts of land protection benefitted the range margins species but not the core range species. The greatest improvements in colonization and extinction rates accrued for forest birds relative to open-habitat or generalist species. Overall, protected areas stemmed extinction more than they promoted colonization. Our results indicate that land protection remains a viable conservation strategy despite changing habitat and climate, as protected areas both reduce the risk of local extinction and facilitate movement into new areas. Our findings suggest conservation in the face of climate change favors creation of new protected areas over enlarging existing ones as the optimal strategy to reduce extinction and provide stepping stones for the greatest number of species.
Keywords:biodiversity  breeding bird atlas  conservation planning  dynamic occupancy modeling  species distributions  atlas de aves reproductoras  biodiversidad  distribución de especies  modelación de ocupación dinámica  planeación de la conservación  生物多样性  繁殖鸟类图谱  保护规划  动态占有模型  物种分布
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