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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/33855
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Title: | Risks and opportunities for wildlife living in road dominated environments. What pieces are missing to complete the puzzle? |
Authors: | Mira, António Galantinho, Ana Medinas, Denis Sabino-Marques, Helena Silva, Carmo Santos, Sara |
Keywords: | Road verges Verge habitats |
Issue Date: | 2021 |
Publisher: | Universidade de Évora |
Citation: | Mira. A.; Galantinho, A.; Medinas, D.; Sabino-Marques, H.; Silva, C.; Santos, S. 2021. Risks and opportunities for wildlife living in road dominated environments. What pieces are missing to complete the puzzle? IENE 2020 International Conference “LIFE LINES. Linear Infrastructure Networks with Ecological Solutions”. Online Conference, 12-14 janeiro. |
Abstract: | A Living on the roadside involves serious risks including restrictions to movements,
disturbance of resting and feeding places, and roadkill menace. However, when crossing
highly human modified areas such as simplified intensive agricultural landscapes or
highly grazed areas, remnant natural habitats associated to roads (verges, roundabouts,
bypasses, etc.) may be the only leftover natural areas acting as a last refuge for rare
plants and small fauna. In these circumstances, there may be a positive contribution of
roads and associated vegetated areas for biodiversity conservation may be considered.
In Europe, remnants of natural habits on roadsides may be particularly relevant for the
implementation of the “European Green Infrastructure” (EGI), defined as “… an interconnected
network of green spaces in urban and infrastructure dominated environments
that preserves the natural value and functions of the ecosystems and provide
humans with the benefits associated with them”.However, to enhance the role of road
vegetated marginal areas in the EGI there is still a long way to go and many fundamental
questions need to be more deeply addressed:i) are road verges refuges or ecological
traps for fauna?; (ii) what species traits makes them more suited to persist in road
natural habitats remnants?; (iii) what is the relevance of verges as corridors?; (v) what
surrounding landscape features are key to define the ecological role of road natural
habitats remnants? What are the effects of roads on demographic parameters of populations
living on the roadside?
We have accessed the role of verges as providing foraging opportunities for bats, refuges
and corridors for small mammals, and ecological traps for small mammal predators.
We found that when roads cross lower suitable habitat, roads verges can be an
important last remnant feeding habitat for bats. In highly grazed areas we have shown
that verges are a critical refuge for small mammals, as important as riparian galleries,
considered one of the most relevant habitats for fauna in the Mediterranean landscape.
Using graph-theory-based connectivity metrics we demonstrated that verges contributed
significantly more to the overall landscape connectivity than surrounding areas.
This shows the high importance of verges as small mammal corridors, even in well
preserved landscapes. We also show a strong positive association between locations
of snakes, owls and mammal carnivores road casualties and the abundance on verges
of wood mice and rabbits, the two main prey in the studied area. These results support
the hypothesis that prey abundance on road verges may be a major driver explaining
predator roadkills.
In Portugal, road verges and other road remnants of natural habitats are estimated to
cover more than 140 thousand hectares, an area larger than any terrestrial A Living on the roadside involves serious risks including restrictions to movements,
disturbance of resting and feeding places, and roadkill menace. However, when crossing
highly human-modified areas such as simplified intensive agricultural landscapes or
highly grazed areas, remnant natural habitats associated to roads (verges, roundabouts,
bypasses, etc.) may be the only leftover natural areas acting as a last refuge for rare
plants and small fauna. In these circumstances, there may be a positive contribution of
roads and associated vegetated areas for biodiversity conservation may be considered.
In Europe, remnants of natural habits on roadsidesmay be particularly relevant for the
implementation of the “European Green Infrastructure” (EGI) , defined as “… an interconnected
network of green spaces in urban and infrastructure dominated environments
that preserves the natural value and functions of the ecosystems and provide
humans with the benefits associated with them”.However, to enhancethe role of road
vegetated marginal areas in the EGI there is still a long way to go and many fundamental
questions need to be more deeply addressed:i) are road verges refuges or ecological
traps for fauna?; (ii) what species traits makes them more suited to persist in road
natural habitats remnants?; (iii) what is the relevance of verges as corridors?; (v) what
surrounding landscape features are key to define the ecological role of road natural
habitats remnants? What are the effects of roads on demographic parameters of populations
living on the roadside?
We have accessed the role of verges as providing foraging opportunities for bats, refuges
and corridors for small mammals, and ecological traps for small mammal predators.
We found that when roads cross lower suitable habitat, roads verges canbe an
important last remnant feeding habitat for bats.In highly grazed areas we have shown
that verges are a critical refuge for small mammals, as important as riparian galleries,
considered one of the most relevant habitats for fauna in the Mediterranean landscape.
Using graph-theory-based connectivity metrics we demonstrated that verges contributed
significantly more to the overall landscape connectivity than surrounding areas.
This shows the high importance of verges as small mammal corridors, even in well
preserved landscapes. We also show a strong positive association between locations
of snakes, owls and mammal carnivores road casualties and the abundance on verges
of wood mice and rabbits, the two main prey in the studied area. These results support
the hypothesis that prey abundance on road verges may be a major driver explaining
predator roadkills.
In Portugal, road verges and other road remnants of natural habitats are estimated to
cover more than 140 thousand hectares, an area larger than any terrestrial protected area in the country. Similar or larger areas of remnant habitats along roads occur in many other countries. Thus, gathering further knowledge aiming to quantify and
identify their role in biodiversity conservation is key to properly offset road impacts on
wildlife. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/33855 |
Type: | lecture |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais BIO - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais
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