2019
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.2847
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A range‐wide model of contemporary, omnidirectional connectivity for the threatened Mojave desert tortoise

Abstract: As habitat destruction leads to species extinctions globally, conservation planning that accounts for population‐level connectivity and gene flow is an urgent priority. Models that only approximate habitat potential are incomplete because areas of high habitat potential may be isolated, whereas intermixed areas of lower habitat potential may still be critical for maintaining connectivity between and among populations. We developed a range‐wide, omnidirectional (coreless) connectivity model and map for the thre… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
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“…While this approach is frequently used to evaluate connectivity between a single source‐destination pair, the application of circuit theory has expanded to multiple source‐destination pairs and to wall‐to‐wall omnidirectional approaches used to model current flow potential across continuous landscape gradients (e.g. Dickson et al, 2019; Gray, Dickson, Nussear, Esque, & Chang, 2019; Koen, Bowman, Sadowski, & Walpole, 2014; McRae et al, 2016; Pitman et al, 2017). The wall‐to‐wall omnidirectional approach provides a framework for evaluating current flow potential (i.e.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While this approach is frequently used to evaluate connectivity between a single source‐destination pair, the application of circuit theory has expanded to multiple source‐destination pairs and to wall‐to‐wall omnidirectional approaches used to model current flow potential across continuous landscape gradients (e.g. Dickson et al, 2019; Gray, Dickson, Nussear, Esque, & Chang, 2019; Koen, Bowman, Sadowski, & Walpole, 2014; McRae et al, 2016; Pitman et al, 2017). The wall‐to‐wall omnidirectional approach provides a framework for evaluating current flow potential (i.e.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…connectivity) within and between any source and destination pair across a landscape (e.g. Gray et al, 2019; Pitman et al, 2017), which is particularly appealing in large landscapes such as KAZA where not all potential sources and destinations of animal movement are understood (e.g. where potential range shifts or recolonization may occur).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We derived topographical covariates from the 30-m USGS Digital Elevation Model [50]. Slope is an important factor in tortoise habitat suitability as well as movement ability [51,52]. Desert washes and ephemeral streambeds are prominent landscape features in the Mojave Desert and are important in desert tortoise ecology, both as foraging areas and potentially as movement corridors [53,54].…”
Section: Environmental Layersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Desert washes and ephemeral streambeds are prominent landscape features in the Mojave Desert and are important in desert tortoise ecology, both as foraging areas and potentially as movement corridors [53,54]. We used a wash layer derived using USDA National Agricultural Imagery Program (NAIP) [55] and classified pixels by the "intensity of wash characteristics" using a random forest model at a 1-m resolution (further details in [48,52]). Washes typically have different substrates and vegetative communities than the surrounding uplands; pixels scored as high wash intensity in the model had lower vegetation cover.…”
Section: Environmental Layersmentioning
confidence: 99%
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