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Corridors affect plants, animals, and their interactions in fragmented landscapes

机译:走廊影响植物,动物及其在分散景观中的相互作用

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Among the most popular strategies for maintaining populations of both plants and animals in fragmented landscapes is to connect isolated patches with thin strips of habitat, called corridors. Corridors are thought to increase the exchange of individuals between habitat patches, promoting genetic exchange and reducing population fluctuations. Empirical studies addressing the effects of corridors have either been small in scale or have ignored confounding effects of increased habitat area created by the presence of a corridor. These methodological difficulties, coupled with a paucity of studies examining the effects of corridors on plants and plant-animal interactions, have sparked debate over the purported value of corridors in conservation planning. We report results of a large-scale experiment that directly address this debate. In eight large-scale experimental landscapes that control for patch area and test alternative mechanisms of corridor function, we demonstrate that corridors not only increase the exchange of animals between patches, but also facilitate two key plant-animal interactions: pollination and seed dispersal. Our results show that the beneficial effects of corridors extend beyond the area they add, and suggest that increased plant and animal movement through corridors will have positive impacts on plant populations and community interactions in fragmented landscapes.
机译:将植物和动物种群维持在零散景观中的最流行策略之一是将孤立的斑块与薄薄的栖息地相连,称为走廊。人们认为走廊可以增加生境斑块之间的个体交换,促进遗传交换并减少种群波动。关于走廊影响的实证研究要么规模很小,要么忽略了由于走廊的存在而增加栖息地面积的混杂影响。这些方法上的困难,再加上缺乏研究走廊对植物和植物-动物相互作用的研究,引发了人们对走廊在保护规划中的价值的争论。我们报告了直接解决这一争论的大规模实验的结果。在八个控制斑块面积和测试走廊功能替代机制的大型实验景观中,我们证明了走廊不仅增加了斑块之间的动物交换,而且还促进了两个关键的植物-动物相互作用:授粉和种子传播。我们的结果表明,走廊的有益影响超出了它们增加的区域,并表明动植物通过走廊的活动增加将对零散景观中的植物种群和社区互动产生积极影响。

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