Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrology

Abstract Key factors affecting metapopulation dynamics of animals include patch size, isolation, and patch quality. For wetland‐associated species, hydrology can affect patch availability, connectivity, and potentially habitat quality; and therefore drive metapopulation dynamics. Wetlands occurring...

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Main Authors: Jorista van der Merwe, Eric C. Hellgren, Eric M. Schauber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2016-03-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1275
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spelling doaj-c63441f7d05b46f2ad1d2165b9100f282020-11-24T21:11:03ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252016-03-0173n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.1275Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrologyJorista van der Merwe0Eric C. Hellgren1Eric M. Schauber2Cooperative Wildlife Research Laboratory Southern Illinois University Carbondale Illinois 62901 USACooperative Wildlife Research Laboratory Southern Illinois University Carbondale Illinois 62901 USACooperative Wildlife Research Laboratory Southern Illinois University Carbondale Illinois 62901 USAAbstract Key factors affecting metapopulation dynamics of animals include patch size, isolation, and patch quality. For wetland‐associated species, hydrology can affect patch availability, connectivity, and potentially habitat quality; and therefore drive metapopulation dynamics. Wetlands occurring on natural river floodplains typically have more dynamic hydrology than anthropogenic wetlands. Our overall objective was to assess the multiyear spatial and temporal variation in occupancy and turnover rates of a semi‐aquatic small mammal at two hydrologically distinct wetland complexes. We live‐trapped marsh rice rats (Oryzomys palustris) for 3 yr and >50 000 trap nights at nine wetland patches on the Mississippi River floodplain and 14 patches at a reclaimed surface mine in southern Illinois. We used dynamic occupancy modeling to estimate initial occupancy, detection, colonization, and extinction rates at each complex. Catch per unit effort (rice rats captured/1000 trap nights) was markedly higher at the floodplain site (28.1) than the mining site (8.1). We found no evidence that temperature, rainfall, or trapping effort affected detection probability. Probability of initial occupancy was similar between sites and positively related to patch size. Patch colonization probability at both sites was related negatively to total rainfall 3 weeks prior to trapping, and varied across years differently at each site. We found interacting effects of site and rainfall on extinction probability: extinction increased with total rainfall 3 months prior to trapping but markedly more at the floodplain site than at the mining site. These site‐specific patterns of colonization and extinction are consistent with the rice rat metapopulation in the floodplain exhibiting a habitat‐tracking dynamic (occupancy dynamics driven by fluctuating quality), whereas the mineland complex behaved more as a classic metapopulation (stochastic colonization & extinction). Our study supports previous work demonstrating metapopulation dynamics in wetland systems being driven by changes in patch quality (via hydrology) rather than solely area and isolation.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1275colonizationextinctionhydrologymetapopulationoccupancyOryzomys palustris
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jorista van der Merwe
Eric C. Hellgren
Eric M. Schauber
spellingShingle Jorista van der Merwe
Eric C. Hellgren
Eric M. Schauber
Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrology
Ecosphere
colonization
extinction
hydrology
metapopulation
occupancy
Oryzomys palustris
author_facet Jorista van der Merwe
Eric C. Hellgren
Eric M. Schauber
author_sort Jorista van der Merwe
title Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrology
title_short Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrology
title_full Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrology
title_fullStr Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrology
title_full_unstemmed Variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: The effect of hydrology
title_sort variation in metapopulation dynamics of a wetland mammal: the effect of hydrology
publisher Wiley
series Ecosphere
issn 2150-8925
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Abstract Key factors affecting metapopulation dynamics of animals include patch size, isolation, and patch quality. For wetland‐associated species, hydrology can affect patch availability, connectivity, and potentially habitat quality; and therefore drive metapopulation dynamics. Wetlands occurring on natural river floodplains typically have more dynamic hydrology than anthropogenic wetlands. Our overall objective was to assess the multiyear spatial and temporal variation in occupancy and turnover rates of a semi‐aquatic small mammal at two hydrologically distinct wetland complexes. We live‐trapped marsh rice rats (Oryzomys palustris) for 3 yr and >50 000 trap nights at nine wetland patches on the Mississippi River floodplain and 14 patches at a reclaimed surface mine in southern Illinois. We used dynamic occupancy modeling to estimate initial occupancy, detection, colonization, and extinction rates at each complex. Catch per unit effort (rice rats captured/1000 trap nights) was markedly higher at the floodplain site (28.1) than the mining site (8.1). We found no evidence that temperature, rainfall, or trapping effort affected detection probability. Probability of initial occupancy was similar between sites and positively related to patch size. Patch colonization probability at both sites was related negatively to total rainfall 3 weeks prior to trapping, and varied across years differently at each site. We found interacting effects of site and rainfall on extinction probability: extinction increased with total rainfall 3 months prior to trapping but markedly more at the floodplain site than at the mining site. These site‐specific patterns of colonization and extinction are consistent with the rice rat metapopulation in the floodplain exhibiting a habitat‐tracking dynamic (occupancy dynamics driven by fluctuating quality), whereas the mineland complex behaved more as a classic metapopulation (stochastic colonization & extinction). Our study supports previous work demonstrating metapopulation dynamics in wetland systems being driven by changes in patch quality (via hydrology) rather than solely area and isolation.
topic colonization
extinction
hydrology
metapopulation
occupancy
Oryzomys palustris
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.1275
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