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187 Landscape Ecology 18: 187–194, 2003. © 2003 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands. Research article Effects of patch attributes, barriers, and distance between patches on the distribution of a rock-dwelling rodent (Lagidium viscacia) R. Susan Walker 1,2,*, Andrés J. Novaro 2 and Lyn C. Branch 1 1 Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA; Wildlife Conservation Society, at Neuquén Applied Ecology Center, Junín de los Andes, Neuquén, 8371, Argentina; *Author for correspondence (e-mail: [email protected]) 2 Received 4 January 2002; accepted in revised form 31 January 2003 Key words: Argentina, Barriers, Chinchillidae, Habitat quality, Isolation, Lagidium, Matrix, Metapopulation, Mountain vizcacha, Patagonia, Patch size Abstract We tested whether size of habitat patches and distance between patches are sufficient to predict the distribution of the mountain vizcacha Lagidium viscacia a large, rock-dwelling rodent of the Patagonian steppe Argentina, or whether information on other patch and landscape characteristics also is required. A logistic regression model including the distance between rock crevices and depth of crevices, distance between a patch and the nearest occupied patch, and whether or not there was a river separating it from the nearest occupied patch was a better predictor of patch occupancy by mountain vizcachas than was a model based only on patch size and distance between patches. Our results indicate that a simple metapopulation analysis based on size of habitat patches and distance between patches may not provide an accurate representation of regional population dynamics if patches vary in habitat quality independently of patch size and features in the matrix alter connectivity. Introduction The size of habitat patches and distance between patches are important predictors of patch occupancy for a variety of species in patchily distributed habitats (Micol et al. 1994; van Apeldoorn et al. 1994; Arnold et al. 1995; Hill et al. 1996; Hokit et al. 1999). The dynamics of metapopulations of different species in real landscapes have been modeled using only these two variables and the presence/absence of the species in a patch (Hanski 1994; Hanski et al. 1995; Moilanen et al. 1998; Hokit et al. 2001). The size of the patch is considered an indication of the size of the population inhabiting that patch, with small patches less likely to be occupied because small populations have a higher probability of extinction than large populations (Wilcox 1980). The distance between patches is used as a measure of the isolation of the patch. Isolated patches may be unoccupied because coloniza- tion of empty patches and demographic rescue of isolated populations are limited. Nevertheless, for strict habitat specialists the most basic limitation to distribution is the availability of appropriate habitat. Characteristics of a patch other than its size, such as the availability of some limiting resource, may be more important in determining population size. In studies reviewed by Mazerolle and Villard (1999) that examined effects of both size and habitat characteristics of patches on population size, population size was significantly correlated with habitat characteristics, but not with patch size, in 71% of animal taxa. Also, factors other than population size, such as human-generated deterministic processes (Sjögren-Gulve and Ray 1996; Fleishman et al. 2002) or habitat characteristics of patches (Kindvall 1996; Sjögren-Gulve and Ray 1996), may be important determinants of extinction probability. 188 In addition, patch isolation and the probability of colonization may be influenced by factors other than distance between patches (Sjögren-Gulve and Ray 1996). Movement of individuals among patches may be constrained by the composition as well as the configuration of the landscape (Wiens 1997). Characteristics of the matrix may result in effective isolation of a patch that is greater or less than that expected based only on distance (Roland et al. 2000; Jonsen et al. 2001; Ricketts 2001). Moilanen and Hanski (1998) incorporated the effects of habitat quality and matrix structure, as well as patch size and distance between patches, into their metapopulation model for the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia). They found that this complex model did not perform much better than a basic model with only patch size and distance between patches. Likewise, for the forest carabid Abax parallelepipedus distance to the nearest occupied site was a highly significant predictor of patch occupancy, and the inclusion of habitat structure and quality as explanatory variables improved the predictive model only slightly (Petit and Burel 1998). However, for the butterfly Speyreria nokomis apacheana, patch occupancy and extinction were best modeled by measures of habitat quality, rather than by patch size and isolation (Fleishman et al. 2002). The purpose of this study was to test whether the size of habitat patches and distance between patches is sufficient to predict the distribution of a mammalian specialist for rocky habitat, the mountain vizcacha (Lagidium viscacia, family Chinchillidae), or whether information on other patch and landscape characteristics also is required. The mountain vizcachas (Lagidium spp.) comprise three or four species of South American rodents, all very similar in appearance, and restricted to rocky habitats. Little research has been conducted on the ecology of these species (Pearson 1948; Galende and Grigera 1998; Galende et al. 1998; Puig et al. 1998; Walker et al. 2000), but all appear to be colonial, living in kin groups within colonies (Walker 2001). The species that is the subject of this study is a large, rabbit-sized (2–2.5 kg) mountain vizcacha found in the southern Andes and Patagonian steppe (Redford and Eisenberg 1992). Patch characteristics included in our analysis were the density, depth, and width of rock crevices, which are used for dens and as refuge from predators, height and slope of cliffs, which may influence predation risk (Walker et al. 2000), and orientation of cliffs, which is an important factor for habitat suitability for the closely related chinchilla, another rock specialist (Jiménez 1995). Food availability also can be an important factor determining the presence of a species, but is a difficult variable to assess for a generalist herbivore such as the mountain vizcacha (Sinclair et al. 1982). Local habitat use by mountain vizcachas within the study area appears to be more constrained by factors related to predation risk rather than food availability (Walker et al. 2000), so we did not include this variable in the analysis of patch occupancy. The landscape characteristic included in the analysis was the presence of rivers in the matrix between patches. Movement of mountain vizcachas across rivers appears to be limited (Walker 2001), so we hypothesized that the presence of a river between two patches could affect their probability of colonization, increasing isolation beyond that of distance alone. Methods Study area The study was conducted in an 8,000-km 2 area in southern Neuquén and western Río Negro provinces of Argentina (near Junín de los Andes, 39.5° S and 71° W; Figure 1). This area is semiarid, grass-shrub steppe with an average ground cover of about 50% (León et al. 1998). The steppe is interspersed with rocky cliffs, mostly of volcanic origin, that provide patchily distributed habitat for mountain vizcachas. Cliffs often are found at the tops of hills and have flat tops and relatively vertical faces. They range in size from less than 100 m to greater than 50 km long. Several rivers ranging from 10 to 100 m wide traverse the area. Analysis of patch occupancy Our analysis of patch occupancy by mountain vizcachas was based on sampling of 36 cliffs that were selected randomly from throughout the study area (Figure 1). The occupancy of a patch by mountain vizcachas is easily discerned by the presence of their feces. Mountain vizcachas defecate in sunning spots near their dens in the rocks, and their feces are distinct from feces of any other animal in the region (Pearson 1948). Patches were considered occupied if feces were found on the rocks, and unoccupied if not. To evaluate rock crevices and height and slope of cliffs, we took measurements along transects placed 189 Figure 1. Location of study area in southern Neuquén and western Río Negro provinces, Argentina, and the locations of 36 randomly-chosen patches that were surveyed to evaluate patch and landscape factors affecting distribution of the mountain vizcacha. on the tops of the cliffs. Transects were 400 m long, except cliffs less than 400 m in length were sampled in their entirety. At two randomly-chosen points within each 100 m of transect, we measured the height and slope of the cliff, and the distance between, depth of, and width of the first five rock crevices encountered from that point on. The distance between crevices was used as a measure of crevice density. These measurements were averaged for each transect. In addition we recorded the overall orientation of the cliff, and determined whether or not there was a river between each patch and its nearest occupied neighbor. We surveyed additional patches as needed to identify the occupied patch nearest each of the ran- 190 domly chosen patches. To estimate the size of the patch, we averaged the height at all sampling points along the transect and multiplied this by cliff length. Lengths of cliffs and distances to nearest occupied neighbors were measured from a digitized map of the study area using ARCVIEW GIS software (ESRI, Redlands, CA). To ascertain how well patch size and distance between patches explained patch occupancy, we performed a logistic regression with those two variables as explanatory variables and patch occupancy as the dependent variable. To determine if a model with additional patch and landscape characteristics would better predict occupancy, we then performed a stepwise logistic regression, including as potential explanatory variables the size of and distance between patches as well as the patch and landscape variables described above. Because north-facing cliffs receive the most sunlight at this latitude, and presence of the chinchilla was associated with north-facing slopes in Chile (Jiménez 1995), we used the cosine of the orientation of the cliff as a measure of ⬙northness⬙ in the model (Roberts 1986). From among these variables we selected patch and landscape variables for the initial regression model using univariate tests (logistic regression for continuous variables and cross tabulation for the presence of a river between patches; Hosmer and Lemeshow (1989)). All variables with a probability less than 0.10 in the univariate tests were entered into the initial model. We then used a backwards stepwise selection procedure to choose the set of explanatory variables that best modeled the occupancy of patches by mountain vizcachas. We set the critical significance level at 0.10 for removing variables, as a more stringent level might exclude variables that could greatly improve the model’s explanatory power (Hosmer and Lemeshow 1989; SjögrenGulve and Ray 1996; Fleishman et al. 2002). Models with more variables were retained if the Wald’s 2 for the coefficients of all the variables were significant and the improvement of the model over a simpler model was significant at the 0.05 level. We determined the improvement of the model by comparing the difference between the −2*log-likelihoods of the two models to a 2 distribution (Hosmer and Lemeshow 1989). For comparison between the model with only patch size and distance between patches and the final model resulting from the stepwise analysis, we examined for each model the deviance goodness-of-fit, the proportion of patches correctly predicted as occupied or unoccupied, and the strength of association between the explanatory variables and patch occupancy in each model as measured by Nagelkerke’s R 2 (Nagelkerke 1991). The deviance goodness-of-fit is a measure of the unexplained variance of the dependent variable, analogous to the error sum of squares in least squares regression. The higher the probability, the less unexplained variance, and the better the fit of the model. Nagelkerke’s R 2 is an analog of the R 2 coefficient of determination in least squares regression and is based on the log likelihood for a model compared to the log likelihood for the baseline model. Statistical analysis of patch occupancy was performed with SPSS v. 10.0.1 software (SPSS Inc. 1999). Results The model based on patch size and distance between patches was a significant predictor of patch occupancy by mountain vizcachas (Model 2 = 20.1, df = 2, p < 0.001). The probability of occupancy of a patch by mountain vizcachas decreased with distance to the nearest occupied neighboring patch and increased with increasing size of the patch (Tables 1 and 2). Inclusion of patch size significantly improved the model (Wald’s 2 = 3.03, p = 0.08) over a model with distance alone (Model 2 = 6.75, df = 1, p = 0.009), but patch occupancy was more strongly associated with distance between patches (R 2 = 0.42) than with size (R 2 = 0.21). The model incorporating additional patch and landscape characteristics was much better at describing patch occupancy by mountain vizcachas. This model, resulting from the stepwise regression, included density and depth of rock crevices, rivers as barriers in the matrix, and distance between patches (Model 2 = 36.27, df = 2, p < 0.001; Table 2). Patch size, cliff orientation, and width of rock crevices were excluded in univariate analyses (Table 1), and slope was excluded in the stepwise multiple regression. This more complex model had a better fit, correctly predicted occupancy for a greater percentage of patches, and had a much higher R 2 than the model based only on size and distance between patches (Table 2). In this model, mountain vizcachas were more likely to be found on patches with more and deeper crevices, that were nearer other occupied patches, and that were not separated from those occupied patches by a river (Tables 1 and 2). 191 Table 1. Means ± standard errors of measurements for patches that were occupied and not occupied by mountain vizcachas in Neuquén and Río Negro provinces, Argentina. Distance between crevices (cm)* Depth of crevices (cm)* Width of crevices (cm) Slope of cliff (degrees)* Height of cliff (m) Size (ha) Distance to nearest occupied patch (km)* Orientation Rivers 1* Occupied Patches (n = 20) Unoccupied Patches (n = 16) 93.3 38.0 13.4 37.9 14.3 6.9 2.1 38.5° 0.05 127.6 24.9 13.1 32.8 8.4 1.2 7.1 32.5° 0.69 ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± 18.6 5.0 3.5 1.5 2.9 2.6 0.5 3.4 ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± 17.0 3.4 2.3 1.3 1.3 0.3 1.4 4.6 1 Proportion of patches separated from the nearest occupied patch by a river. *Significant at the 0.10 level in the univariate tests. Table 2. Characteristics of logistic regression models of patch occupancy (n = 36 patches) by mountain vizcachas based only on patch size and distance between patches (Size/Distance), and based on the full model (Distance/River/Rock Crevices) resulting from the stepwise logistic regression with distance between patches, presence or absence of rivers between patches, distance between crevices, and depth of rock crevices. Model Occupancy logit Goodness of fit Percentage predicted correctly Nagelkerke’s R 2 Distance/Size Distance/River/Rock Crevices −0.56 (Distance) + 0.8 (Size) −1.26 (Distance) −5.25 (River) −0.06 (Distance between crevices) +0.3 (Depth of crevices) 0.70 0.99 80.0 91.4 0.58 0.88 The occupancy status of only one patch (#37) was predicted incorrectly by both models (Table 3). This patch was predicted to be occupied, but was not. The model based on the size of and distance between patches incorrectly predicted the occupancy of seven patches. Of the five patches predicted to be occupied that were not, four were separated from the nearest occupied patch by a river. Two patches (#7 and 22) were incorrectly predicted to be unoccupied by the size and distance model, and both had deep and abundant crevices. The more complex model incorrectly predicted occupancy of three patches. One patch (#26) was incorrectly predicted to be unoccupied. In this case the crevices appeared to be inadequate (sparse and shallow), but the patch was a large one, and not isolated by a great distance or a river. An examination of individual measurements for this patch revealed that in some parts of the patch crevices were deeper and more abundant, but the average was affected by some extreme values. Of the two patches incorrectly predicted to be occupied, one (#32) was very small and isolated by distance, and the other (#37) was the patch that also was predicted incorrectly to be occupied by the size and distance model. This patch was the closest patch in the sample to a human dwelling (< 500 m), and the lack of mountain vizcachas at this site could have been because of human disturbance. Discussion For the rock-dwelling mountain vizcacha, a model based on patch characteristics related to habitat quality (density and depth of rock crevices), barriers in the matrix (rivers), and distance between patches was a better predictor of occupancy than patch size and distance between patches. Our results indicate that a simple metapopulation analysis based on patch size and distance between patches may not provide an accurate representation of regional population dynamics if patches vary in habitat quality independently of patch size and if features in the matrix alter connectivity. Based on their analysis of the metapopulation dynamics of the Glanville fritillary butterfly, Moilanen and Hanski (1998) concluded that knowledge of patch size and distance between habitat patches may be suf- 192 Table 3. Patches incorrectly predicted as occupied or unoccupied by mountain vizcachas by one (for size/distance model, n = 7; for full model, n = 3) or both models (n = 1), and values for explanatory variables used in the models. Total number of patches analyzed was 36. Crevice Incorrectly predicted Patch# Nearest (km) 7 22 23 26 29 31 32 37 43 4 7.1 5.5 2 3.3 1.5 5 0.5 2.3 1 Size (ha) Spacing (cm) 0.5 2.4 4 9.4 1.1 0.7 0.1 1 0.8 43 26 72 106 40 86 30 163 62 2 Depth River 40 28 28 16 23 19 16 30 16 No No Yes No Yes Yes No No Yes 3 Occupied Size/Distance 4 Yes Yes No Yes No No No No No X X X Full 5 X X X X X X X 1 Distance to nearest occupied patch Average distance between rock crevices 3 Presence of a river between the patch and the nearest occupied patch 4 Model with patch size and distance between patches as explanatory variables 5 Full model resulting from the stepwise logistic regression with distance between patches, presence of rivers between patches, and rock measurements as explanatory variables. 2 ficient for the study of metapopulation dynamics of most species. However, they suggest that their model based on patch size and isolation by distance was not improved much by the addition of habitat quality because the most important habitat variables had already been incorporated into the process of choosing which habitat patches would be included in the analysis. The basic model was not improved by the incorporation of landscape structure, but the satellite images they used to characterize the matrix structure appeared to be inadequate for detecting aspects of the landscape that were most relevant to the species. In contrast, in the case of the mountain vizcacha it would be difficult to incorporate habitat characteristics into the process of choosing which patches should be used in an analysis of regional dynamics, and the presence or absence of a river between two patches is an easily measured characteristic of the matrix that is biologically relevant. The habitat characteristics that were most important to mountain vizcachas were the abundance and depth of rock crevices. Patches with more and deeper crevices had a higher probability of being occupied by mountain vizcachas, but some patches with a low density of crevices and a low average depth of crevices were occupied. As it would never be possible to measure all crevices in a patch, some sampling and measure of summary, such as an average, are necessary to characterize the nature of the crevices. The weak effect of patch size on occupancy by mountain vizcachas may occur because population size is not linearly related to patch size, or because some factor other than population size is a more important determinant of extinction probability within patches. The carrying capacity of a patch for mountain vizcachas may be influenced more by the number of appropriate crevices in the rocks than by the absolute size of the patch, as in some cases smaller patches could have more crevices than large ones. Extinction risk could also be greater at patches with fewer and shallower crevices, due to greater susceptibility of mountain vizcachas to predation where crevices that provide adequate shelter are lacking. In some other studies characteristics of a patch other than its size have been found to be more important correlates with patch occupancy. For bush-crickets, habitat heterogeneity within a patch was found to compensate for patch size in terms of extinction probability (Kindvall 1996). Smaller, but more heterogeneous patches had lower extinction probabilities than larger, more homogeneous ones because different habitat types were optimal under different climatic conditions over time. Patch occupation and extinction were strongly related to habitat quality, but not to patch size, in Speyreria nokomis apacheana butter- 193 flies (Fleishman et al. 2002). In other studies habitat characteristics were important predictors of occupancy in addition to patch size (van Apeldoorn et al. 1994; Arnold et al. 1995). Isolation by distance was also a significant factor affecting distribution of mountain vizcachas, but the effect of distance was accentuated by the presence of a river between two patches. Rivers may be absolute barriers for mountain vizcachas except in places where water level drops seasonally to expose rocks that could provide substrate for mountain vizcachas to cross. Several recent studies have demonstrated that the probability of colonization of vacant habitat patches, or of immigration that ’rescues’ doomed populations, can be affected by characteristics of the matrix that limit or enhance the movement of individuals. Studies using mark and recapture methods have found that for some butterfly and beetle species, patches separated from occupied patches by inhospitable habitat in the matrix have lower probabilities of colonization than patches the same distance apart but with hospitable intervening habitat (Roland et al. 2000; Jonsen et al. 2001; Ricketts 2001). A logistic regression analysis revealed that patch occupancy of the pool frog was correlated with human disturbance in the matrix, which created barriers to movement by the frogs (Sjögren-Gulve and Ray 1996). Studies of genetic structure and gene flow also have provided evidence for limited movement of individuals of some species through different habitat types (Keyghobadi et al. 1999) and across barriers in the matrix (King 1987; Vos et al. 2001). An analysis of population genetics of mountain vizcachas in our study area offers additional evidence that movement is constrained by the structure of the landscape (Walker 2001). Genetic structure of mountain vizcachas was correlated more highly with a distance measure that incorporated the cost of crossing rivers and traveling over different geological surfaces than with straight-line distance. A finer-scale analysis of genetic structure within a 32-km 2 portion of the study area indicated that movement among patches also is restricted at this scale. Movement of males was less restricted than that of females, though, and all habitat patches were occupied. Thus, different population structures and dynamics may be observed according to the scale of the study (Hill et al. 1996) and the landscape configuration of the particular study area (Stith et al. 1996). Nevertheless, it is clear that among-patch processes play a major role in the population dynamics of mountain vizcachas. Data on patch size and distance between patches is generally easy to obtain, and there is no doubt that these variables are often important and sometimes sufficient to explain the distribution of a species. However, for studies of distribution and persistence of little-known species in patchy habitats, it is prudent to evaluate both patch characteristics and landscape context of habitat patches whenever possible. The distribution of a species cannot be assumed to be based solely on the availability of appropriate habitat (Mazerolle and Villard 1999), but neither can it be assumed to be explained only by patch size and distance between habitat patches. Efforts should be made to evaluate relevant patch characteristics and factors that determine connectivity for such species. Acknowledgements We thank the Neuquén Applied Ecology Center for logistical support and for permission to work in the province of Neuquén, and the Delegación Regional Patagonia de la Administración de Parques Nacionales of Argentina for permission to work in Parques Nacionales Lanín and Nahuel Huapi. We also thank all the landowners and inhabitants who allowed us to survey cliffs on their properties. J. Harrison and G. Jones of the IFAS Statistics Dept. at the University of Florida provided statistical advice and help with analysis. M. Biongiorno, O. Monsalvo, J. SchachterBroide, V. Pancotto, and G. Ackermann assisted in the field. Funding was provided by the Lincoln Park Zoo Scott Neotropic Fund, Sigma Xi – The Research Society, the American Society of Mammalogy, and the University of Florida. Additional support was provided by the Wildlife Conservation Society, and Patagonia, Inc. provided some equipment. This is Florida Agricultural Experiment Station Journal Series No. R-09220. 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