首页> 外文期刊>Wildlife Research >Roads and wildlife: impacts, mitigation and implications for wildlife management in Australia
【24h】

Roads and wildlife: impacts, mitigation and implications for wildlife management in Australia

机译:道路和野生动植物:对澳大利亚野生动植物管理的影响,缓解和影响

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Roads can disrupt the population processes of vertebrate wildlife species through habitat fragmentation and vehicle collision. The aims of this review were to synthesise the recent literature on road impacts on wildlife, to identify gaps in our understanding of this topic and to guide future research and management in Australia. We reviewed 244 published studies from the last decade on road and vehicle impacts on wildlife conducted worldwide. A geographic bias was evident among the studies, with 51% conducted in North America, 25% in Europe, 17% in Australia and 7% across several other countries. A taxonomic bias was evident towards mammals (53%), with far fewer studies on birds (10%), amphibians (9%) and reptiles (8%), and some (20%) included multiple taxonomic groups. Although this bias is partly explained by large insurance and medical costs associated with collisions involving large mammals, it is also evident in Australia and signals that large components of biodiversity are being neglected. Despite a prevalence of studies on wildlife road mortality (34%), population impacts are poorly described, although negative impacts are implicated for many species. Barrier effects of roads were examined in 44 studies, with behavioural aversion leading to adverse genetic consequences identified for some species. The installation of road-crossing structures for wildlife has become commonplace worldwide, but has largely outpaced an understanding of any population benefits. Road underpasses appear to be an important generic mitigation tool because a wide range of taxa use them. This knowledge can guide management until further information becomes available. Global concern about the decline of amphibians should lead to a greater focus on road impacts on this group. Priorities for research in Australia include (1) genetic studies on a range of taxa to provide an understanding of life-history traits that predispose species to barrier effects from roads, (2) studies that examine whether crossing structures alleviate population impacts from roads and (3) studies that describe the behavioural response of frogs to crossing structures and that identify factors that may promote the use of suitable structures. A national strategy to mitigate the impacts of roads on wildlife populations is long overdue and must ensure that research on this topic is adequately funded.
机译:道路会因栖息地破碎和车辆碰撞而破坏脊椎动物野生动植物物种的繁殖过程。这篇综述的目的是综合有关道路对野生动植物的影响的最新文献,找出我们对这一主题的理解方面的差距,并指导澳大利亚的未来研究和管理。我们回顾了过去十年中发表的244篇关于道路和车辆对野生动植物的影响的研究,这些研究在全球范围内进行。在这些研究中,地理偏见很明显,在北美进行了51%,在欧洲进行了25%,在澳大利亚进行了17%,在其他几个国家进行了7%。对哺乳动物(53%)存在明显的分类学偏见,对鸟类(10%),两栖动物(9%)和爬行动物(8%)的研究少得多,有的(20%)包括多个分类学组。尽管这种偏见的部分原因是与大型哺乳动物发生碰撞相关的巨额保险和医疗费用,但在澳大利亚也很明显,这表明生物多样性的大部分已被忽略。尽管对野生生物道路死亡率的研究非常普遍(34%),但对人口影响的描述却很少,尽管对许多物种也有负面影响。在44项研究中检查了道路的障碍影响,行为规避导致了某些物种的不良遗传后果。在世界范围内,为野生动植物安装过马路结构已变得司空见惯,但在很大程度上已经超过了对任何人口收益的理解。道路地下通道似乎是一种重要的通用缓解工具,因为各种各样的分类单元都在使用它们。这些知识可以指导管理,直到获得更多信息为止。全球对两栖动物数量下降的关注将导致人们更加关注道路对这一群体的影响。在澳大利亚的研究重点包括(1)对一系列分类单元进行遗传研究,以了解使物种容易受到道路屏障影响的生命历史特征;(2)研究穿越结构是否减轻道路人口影响的研究;以及( 3)描述青蛙对交叉结构的行为反应并确定可能促进使用合适结构的因素的研究。缓解道路对野生动植物种群的影响的国家战略早就应该成立,必须确保对该主题的研究有足够的资金。

著录项

  • 来源
    《Wildlife Research》 |2010年第4期|p.320-331|共12页
  • 作者单位

    A School of Environmental Science & Management, Southern Cross University, Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia. B Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia. C Corresponding author. Email: brendan.taylor@scu.edu.au;

  • 收录信息
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号