1 / 9

Road permeability issues and solutions for migrating ungulates

Road permeability issues and solutions for migrating ungulates. David Rosengarten. Winter Ecology – Spring 2008 Mountain Research Station – University of Colorado, Boulder. General Negative Effects Of Roads. Mortality from construction and collisions Habitat fractionation

Télécharger la présentation

Road permeability issues and solutions for migrating ungulates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Road permeability issues and solutions for migrating ungulates David Rosengarten Winter Ecology – Spring 2008 Mountain Research Station – University of Colorado, Boulder

  2. General Negative Effects Of Roads • Mortality from construction and collisions • Habitat fractionation • Modified animal behavior • Exotic species introduction • Restriction of wildlife movement • Reduction of gene flow, biodiversity

  3. Methods of Observing Crossings • GPS • Video • Tracks • Collisions

  4. Seasonal Ranges

  5. Why Did The Ungulate Cross The Road? Seasonal differences in crossing frequencies demonstrate winter effect on mammals A different study observed this trend as well in elk and deer, observing 3077 crossings in the summer and only 494 in winter. (Clevenger 2004) Graph of crossing elk/approaching elk by month (Dodd 2007)

  6. Factors Influencing Crossing Frequency and Location Elk • Season • Tolerance • Gender • Nutrients • Human • Traffic • Weekday • Fences • Crossing structures There is a lot of interaction between and within these two sets of factors

  7. Crossing Structure Design Placement: Habitat quality has shown a relation to preferred crossing areas Dimensions: The design of a structure will determine what animals are willing/able to use it Limitations: Requirements of different species require high variability in crossing structure design

  8. Conclusions • Although a severe ecological barrier, roads are crossed by mammals due to larger forcings • Seasonality has a large influence on ungulate movement and sensitivity to roads • Crossing structures can mitigate this effect but much more work needs to be done to determine the most effective methods

  9. Works Cited • S.M. Alexander, N.M. Waters. “The effects of highway transportation corridors on wildlife: a case study of Banff National Park” Transportation Research Part C 8 (2000) 307±320 • A.P. Clevenger, N. Waltho. “Performance indices to identify attributes of highway crossing structures facilitating movement of large mammals” Biological Conservation 121 (2005) 453–464 • N.L. Dodd, J.W. Gagnon, A.L. Manzo, R.E. Schweinsburg. “Video Surveillance to Assess Highway Underpass Use by Elk in Arizona” JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT 71-2 (2007) 637–645 • N.L.Dodd, J.W. Gagnon, S. Boe, E.E. Schweinsburg. “Characteristics of elk-vehicle collisions and comparison to GPS-determined highway crossing patterns” (2005) http://repositories.cdlib.org/jmie/roadeco/Dodd2005a • S.C. Trombulak, C.A. Frissell. “Review of Ecological Effects of Roads on Terrestrial and Aquatic Communities” Conservation Biology V 14 no.1 (2000) 18-30 • USDA “American Elk (Cervus elaphus)” Fish and Wildlife Habitat Management Leaflet no. 11 (1999)

More Related