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Using experimental reintroductions to resolve the roles of habitat quality and metapopulation dynamics on patch occupancy in fragmented landscapes
Authors:Doug P Armstrong  Rebecca L Boulton  Nikki McArthur  Susanne Govella  Nic Gorman  Rhonda Pike  Yvan Richard
Institution:1. Wildlife Ecology Group, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand;2. Wildlife Ecology Group, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

Invasion Science & Wildlife Ecology Group, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia;3. Wildlife Ecology Group, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

Biodiversity Group, Department of Conservation – Te Papa Atawhai, Christchurch, New Zealand;4. Wildlife Ecology Group, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

Current Brown Owl Organics, Rotorua, New Zealand;5. Wildlife Ecology Group, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

Dragonfly Data Science, Wellington, New Zealand

Abstract:Declines of species in fragmented landscapes can potentially be reversed either by restoring connectivity or restoring local habitat quality. Models fitted to snapshot occupancy data can be used to predict the effectiveness of these actions. However, such inferences can be misleading if the reliability of the habitat and landscape metrics used is unknown. The only way to unambiguously resolve the roles of habitat quality and metapopulation dynamics is to conduct experimental reintroductions to unoccupied patches so that habitat quality can be measured directly from data on vital rates. We, therefore, conducted a 15-year study that involved reintroducing a threatened New Zealand bird to unoccupied forest fragments to obtain reliable data on their habitat quality and reassess initial inferences made by modeling occupancy against habitat and landscape metrics. Although reproductive rates were similar among fragments, subtle differences in adult survival rates resulted in λ (finite rate of increase) estimations of <0.9 for 9 of the 12 fragments that were previously unoccupied. This was the case for only 1 of 14 naturally occupied fragments. This variation in λ largely explained the original occupancy pattern, reversing our original conclusion from occupancy modeling that this occupancy pattern was isolation driven and suggesting that it would be detrimental to increase connectivity without improving local habitat quality. These results illustrate that inferences from snapshot occupancy should be treated with caution and subjected to testing through experimental reintroductions in selected model systems.
Keywords:connectivity  habitat fragmentation  habitat restoration  patch dynamics  population growth rate  reintroduction  species recovery  translocation  conectividad  dinámicas  de fragmentos  fragmentación  del hábitat  recuperación de especies  reintroducción  restauración del hábitat  reubicación  tasa de crecimiento poblacional
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