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Determinando áreas mínimas de hábitat y hábitat en corredes para pumas
Author(s) -
Beier Paul
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
conservation biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.2
H-Index - 222
eISSN - 1523-1739
pISSN - 0888-8892
DOI - 10.1046/j.1523-1739.1993.07010094.x
Subject(s) - habitat , geography , extinction (optical mineralogy) , population , range (aeronautics) , habitat destruction , population decline , immigration , ecology , local extinction , home range , population growth , population size , wildlife corridor , biological dispersal , biology , demography , archaeology , paleontology , materials science , sociology , composite material
I simulated population dynamics of cougars to predict the minimum areas and levels of immigration needed to avoid population extinction caused by demographic and environmental stochasticity for a period of 100 years. Under most plausible parameter values, the model predicted very low extinction risk in areas as small as 2200 km 2 , and (in the absence of immigration) increasing risk as area decreased below 2200 km 2 . If as few as one to four animals per decade could immigrate into a small population, the probability of population persistence increased markedly. Thus a corridor for immigration will benefit a small population in an area where further loss of habitat will occur. The model was applied to the cougar population in the Santa Ana Mountain Range of southern California (2070 km 2 , with about 20 adults). Field data support the model’s conclusion that this population is demographically unstable. There will be a high risk of extinction if the habitat is reduced to currently protected and connected areas (1114 km 2 ). A movement corridor allowing immigration from the adjacent population and intra‐range corridors would greatly enhance the prognosis. However, the last corridor for immigration has been degraded by recent human activity. Within the mountain range, cougars recently became extinct in a 75 km 2 habitat fragment recently isolated by development, and cougars will become extinct in another 150 km 2 of habitat if a proposed housing project occludes a critical corridor. Radio tracking has confirmed use of this and other important corridors. Neither the model nor the field data alone would have much influence in the face of development pressure; together they have stimulated interest in restoring and protecting critical corridors in this range. Nonetheless, the long‐term prognosis for this populations is bleak, because 22 local governments review potential impact on a case‐by‐case basis. Effective land‐use planning must be spatially explicit and regional in scope. Because cougars need corridors and because telemetered cougars can quickly identify movement corridors, cougar research is an efficient and appropriate way to inject biological data into such planning efforts.