Publication | Closed Access
Towards a unified framework for connectivity that disentangles movement and mortality in space and time
87
Citations
44
References
2019
Year
Spatial EcologyEngineeringMovement EcologySpatiotemporal OrganizationNetwork AnalysisLandscape ConnectivitySocial SciencesSpatial NetworkData ScienceBiogeographyLandscapes Alter MovementNetwork NeuroscienceUnified FrameworkGeographyUrban EcologySpace-time SimulationTopological RepresentationEcological NetworkNetwork ScienceEvolutionary BiologyTemporal NetworkMultiple Connectivity Metrics
Predicting connectivity, or how landscapes alter movement, is essential for understanding the scope for species persistence with environmental change. Although it is well known that movement is risky, connectivity modelling often conflates behavioural responses to the matrix through which animals disperse with mortality risk. We derive new connectivity models using random walk theory, based on the concept of spatial absorbing Markov chains. These models decompose the role of matrix on movement behaviour and mortality risk, can incorporate species distribution to predict the amount of flow, and provide both short- and long-term analytical solutions for multiple connectivity metrics. We validate the framework using data on movement of an insect herbivore in 15 experimental landscapes. Our results demonstrate that disentangling the roles of movement behaviour and mortality risk is fundamental to accurately interpreting landscape connectivity, and that spatial absorbing Markov chains provide a generalisable and powerful framework with which to do so.
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