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Multi-level, multi-scale habitat selection by a wide-ranging, federally threatened snake

Landscape Ecology, ISSN: 1572-9761, Vol: 33, Issue: 5, Page: 743-763
2018
  • 31
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 77
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    31
    • Citation Indexes
      31
  • Captures
    77

Article Description

Context: Although multi-scale approaches are commonly used to assess wildlife-habitat relationships, few studies have examined selection at multiple spatial scales within different hierarchical levels/orders of selection [sensu Johnson’s (1980) orders of selection]. Failure to account for multi-scale relationships within a single level of selection may lead to misleading inferences and predictions. Objectives: We examined habitat selection of the federally threatened eastern indigo snake (Drymarchon couperi) in peninsular Florida at the level of the home range (Level II selection) and individual telemetry location (Level III selection) to identify influential habitat covariates and predict relative probability of selection. Methods: Within each level, we identified the characteristic scale for each habitat covariate to create multi-scale resource selection functions. We used home range selection functions to model Level II selection and paired logistic regression to model Level III selection. Results: At both levels, EIS selected undeveloped upland land covers and habitat edges while avoiding urban land covers. Selection was generally strongest at the finest scales with the exception of Level II urban edge which was avoided at a broad scale indicating avoidance of urbanized land covers rather than urban edge per se. Conclusions: Our study illustrates how characteristic scales may vary within a single level of selection and demonstrates the utility of multi-level, scale-optimized habitat selection analyses. We emphasize the importance of maintaining large mosaics of natural habitats for eastern indigo snake conservation.

Bibliographic Details

Javan M. Bauder; Kevin McGarigal; David R. Breininger; M. Rebecca Bolt; Michael L. Legare; Christopher L. Jenkins; Betsie B. Rothermel

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Social Sciences; Environmental Science

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