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Drivers and Consequences of Alternative Landscape Futures on Wildlife Distributions in New England, United States

机译:替代风景期货在新英格兰,美国野生动物分布的驱动因素及后果

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In an era of rapid climate and land transformation, it is increasingly important to understand how future changes impact natural systems. Scenario studies can offer the structure and perspective needed to understand the impacts of change and help inform management and conservation decisions. We implemented a scenario-based approach to assess how two high impact drivers of landscape change influence the distributions of managed wildlife species (n = 10) in the New England region of the northeastern United States. We used expert derived species distribution models (SDMs) and scenarios developed by the New England Landscape Futures Project (NELFP) to estimate how species distributions change under various trajectories (n = 5) of landscape change. The NELFP scenarios were built around two primary drivers – Socio-Economic Connectedness (SEC) and Natural Resource Planning and Innovation (NRPI) – and provide plausible alternatives for how the New England region may change over fifty years (2010 to 2060). Our models generally resulted in species occurrence and richness declines by 2060. The majority of species (7 of 10) experienced declines in regional occurrence for all NELFP scenarios, and one species experienced a projected increase in mean regional occurrence for all scenarios. Our results indicate that the NRPI and SEC drivers strongly influenced projected distribution changes compared to baseline projections. NRPI had a greater impact on distribution change for five species (coyote, moose, striped skunk, white-tailed deer, and wild turkey), while SEC had a greater impact on four species (American black bear, bobcat, raccoon, and red fox); one species (gray fox) was equally influenced by both NRPI and SEC. These results emphasize the importance of integrating both natural resource planning and socio-economic factors when addressing issues of distribution change and offer insights that can inform proactive management and conservation planning.
机译:在气候快速和土地转型的时代,了解未来变化如何影响自然系统,越来越重要。情景研究可以提供了解变革的影响,并帮助提供信息和保护决策所需的结构和视角。我们实施了一种基于场景的方法,评估了两个高影响力的景观变革驱动因素对美国东北部新英格兰地区的管理野生动物种类(n = 10)的分布。我们使用了新英格兰景观期货项目(NELFP)开发的专家派生物种分发模型(SDMS)和场景来估算物种在景观变革的各种轨迹(n = 5)下的种类发行方式如何变化。 Nelfp情景围绕两个主要司机 - 社会经济联合(秒)和自然资源规划和创新(NRPI) - 并为新英格兰地区可能会改为五十年(2010年至2060)提供合理的替代品。我们的模型通常导致物种发生和丰富度下降到2060年。大多数物种(7个中的7个)在区域事件中经历过各种Nelfp情景的下降,并且一个物种在所有情况下经历了平均区域发生的预计增加。我们的结果表明,与基线预测相比,NRPI和SEC驱动程序强烈影响了预计分布变化。 NRPI对五种物种的分布变化产生了更大的影响(土狼,驼鹿,条纹臭鼬,白尾鹿和野生土耳其),而SEC对四种物种影响更大(美国黑熊,山猫,浣熊和红狐狸);一个物种(灰色狐狸)同样受NRPI和SEC的影响。这些结果强调了在解决分销变化问题时整合自然资源规划和社会经济因素的重要性,并提供可通知主动管理和保护计划的见解。

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