Biodiversity Research
Does local habitat fragmentation affect large-scale distributions? The case of a specialist grassland bird
Article first published online: 9 NOV 2012
DOI: 10.1111/ddi.12019
© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Additional Information
How to Cite
Reino, L., Beja, P., Araújo, M. B., Dray, S., Segurado, P. (2013), Does local habitat fragmentation affect large-scale distributions? The case of a specialist grassland bird. Diversity and Distributions, 19: 423–432. doi: 10.1111/ddi.12019
Publication History
- Issue published online: 15 MAR 2013
- Article first published online: 9 NOV 2012
Funded by
- Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation. Grant Numbers: PTDC/AGR-AAM/102300/2008, SFRH/BPD/62865/2009, SFRH/BPD/39067/2007
- Abstract
- Article
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- Distribution modelling;
- ecological niche modelling;
- edge effects;
- grassland birds;
- habitat fragmentation;
- model selection
Abstract
Aim
Although the negative effects of habitat fragmentation have been widely documented at the landscape scale, much less is known about its impacts on species distributions at the biogeographical scale. We hypothesize that fragmentation influences the large-scale distribution of area- and edge-sensitive species by limiting their occurrence in regions with fragmented habitats, despite otherwise favourable environmental conditions. We test this hypothesis by assessing the interplay of climate and landscape factors influencing the distribution of the calandra lark, a grassland specialist that is highly sensitive to habitat fragmentation.
Location
Iberia Peninsula, Europe.
Methods
Ecological niche modelling was used to investigate the relative influence of climate/topography, landscape fragmentation and spatial structure on calandra lark distribution. Modelling assumed explicitly a hierarchically structured effect among explanatory variables, with climate/topography operating at broader spatial scales than landscape variables. An eigenvector-based spatial filtering approach was used to cancel bias introduced by spatial autocorrelation. The information theoretic approach was used in model selection, and variation partitioning was used to isolate the unique and shared effects of sets of explanatory variables.
Results
Climate and topography were the most influential variables shaping the distribution of calandra lark, but incorporating landscape metrics contributed significantly to model improvement. The probability of calandra lark occurrence increased with total habitat area and declined with the number of patches and edge density. Variation partitioning showed a strong overlap between variation explained by climate/topography and landscape variables. After accounting for spatial structure in species distribution, the explanatory power of environmental variables remained largely unchanged.
Main conclusions
We have shown here that landscape fragmentation can influence species distributions at the biogeographical scale. Incorporating fragmentation metrics into large-scale ecological niche models may contribute for a better understanding of mechanism driving species distributions and for improving predictive modelling of range shifts associated with land use and climate changes.

1472-4642/asset/ddi_left.gif?v=1&s=b5c0734a11efd255b2215c418a42d0a633a003aa)
