Affordable Access

Access to the full text

A scale-sensitive connectivity analysis to identify ecological networks and conservation value in river networks

Authors
  • Van Looy, Kris1
  • Cavillon, Cyril1
  • Tormos, Thierry2
  • Piffady, Jérémy1
  • Landry, Philippe3
  • Souchon, Yves1
  • 1 UR MALY, River hydro-ecology unit ONEMA IRSTEA, National Research Institute of Science and Technology for Environment and Agriculture IRSTEA Lyon, 5 rue de la Doua - CS70077, Villeurbane-Lyon Cedex, 69626, France , Villeurbane-Lyon Cedex (France)
  • 2 River Hydro-ecology Unit ONEMA IRSTEA, French National Agency for Water and Aquatic Environments (ONEMA), Lyon, France , Lyon (France)
  • 3 National Wildlife Office (ONCFS), Research Unit, 5 rue Saint Thibaud, Saint Benoît, Auffargis, 78610, France , Auffargis (France)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Landscape Ecology
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Publication Date
Mar 13, 2013
Volume
28
Issue
7
Pages
1239–1249
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-013-9869-x
Source
Springer Nature
Keywords
License
Yellow

Abstract

Existing methods for connectivity analysis still encounter difficulties in explaining functional relationships between network structure and ecological patterns over larger territories or complex structures like dendritic river networks. We propose a method that addresses the problem of scale and resolution in the connectivity analysis of dendritic network structures, illustrated here for the re-colonization of the French Loire river basin by the European otter. The ecological niche factor approach is applied to infer favourable habitat in the river network based on large scale data of land use and hydro-morphology of river segments for the entire river basin. These analyses identified the stressors to the riparian zone of channel straightening, urbanisation and forest fragmentation as the principal factors explaining otter occurrence. Using this estimate of habitat favourability, we used the Integral Index of Connectivity to quantify habitat availability and connectivity in the dendritic river network. When we calculate the integral index of connectivity over different spatial extents by constraining network distances, the scale-sensitivity of the network’s connectivity emerges. Accounting for high mobility by entering larger network distances in the analysis identifies conservation networks and priorities mainly in downstream parts of the river basin, whereas with smaller network distances, more restricted high quality areas in central and upstream parts are highlighted. The presented approach performed better than distribution modelling approaches in explaining species occurrence over the river network and confirms the crucial aspect of connectivity in otter re-colonization.

Report this publication

Statistics

Seen <100 times