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Potential Negative Ecological Effects of Corridors
Authors:NICK M. HADDAD  LARS A. BRUDVIG  ELLEN I. DAMSCHEN  DANIEL M. EVANS  BRENDA L. JOHNSON  DOUGLAS J. LEVEY  JOHN L. ORROCK  JULIAN RESASCO  LAUREN L. SULLIVAN  JOSH J. TEWKSBURY  STEPHANIE A. WAGNER  AIMEE J. WELDON
Affiliation:1. Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, , Raleigh, 27695 U.S.A.;2. Department of Plant Biology, Michigan State University, , East Lansing, 48824‐1312 U.S.A.;3. Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, , Madison, 53706 U.S.A.;4. American Association for the Advancement of Science, , Washington, 20005 U.S.A.;5. National Science Foundation, , Arlington, 22230 U.S.A.;6. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UCB 334, University of Colorado, , Boulder, CO, 80309 U.S.A.;7. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, , Ames, IA, 50011 U.S.A.;8. The Luc Hoffmann Institute, WWF International, , 1196 Gland, Switzerland;9. Illinois State Geological Survey, University of Illinois Urbana‐Champaign, , Champaign, IL, 61820‐6918 U.S.A.;10. Potomac Conservancy, , Silver Spring, MD, 20910 U.S.A.
Abstract:Despite many studies showing that landscape corridors increase dispersal and species richness for disparate taxa, concerns persist that corridors can have unintended negative effects. In particular, some of the same mechanisms that underlie positive effects of corridors on species of conservation interest may also increase the spread and impact of antagonistic species (e.g., predators and pathogens), foster negative effects of edges, increase invasion by exotic species, increase the spread of unwanted disturbances such as fire, or increase population synchrony and thus reduce persistence. We conducted a literature review and meta‐analysis to evaluate the prevalence of each of these negative effects. We found no evidence that corridors increase unwanted disturbance or non‐native species invasion; however, these have not been well‐studied concerns (1 and 6 studies, respectively). Other effects of corridors were more often studied and yielded inconsistent results; mean effect sizes were indistinguishable from zero. The effect of edges on abundances of target species was as likely to be positive as negative. Corridors were as likely to have no effect on antagonists or population synchrony as they were to increase those negative effects. We found 3 deficiencies in the literature. First, despite studies on how corridors affect predators, there are few studies of related consequences for prey population size and persistence. Second, properly designed studies of negative corridor effects are needed in natural corridors at scales larger than those achievable in experimental systems. Third, studies are needed to test more targeted hypotheses about when corridor‐mediated effects on invasive species or disturbance may be negative for species of management concern. Overall, we found no overarching support for concerns that construction and maintenance of habitat corridors may result in unintended negative consequences. Negative edge effects may be mitigated by widening corridors or softening edges between corridors and the matrix. Other negative effects are relatively small and manageable compared with the large positive effects of facilitating dispersal and increasing diversity of native species. Efectos Negativos Potenciales de los Corredores
Keywords:connectivity  dispersal  disturbance  diversity  edge effects  fragmentation  invasive species  Conectividad  dispersió  n  diversidad  efecto de borde  especies invasoras  fragmentació  n  perturbació  n
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