Integrating animal tracking datasets at a continental scale for mapping Eurasian lynx habitat

Author:

Oeser Julian1ORCID,Heurich Marco234,Kramer‐Schadt Stephanie56,Mattisson Jenny7,Krofel Miha8ORCID,Krojerová‐Prokešová Jarmila910,Zimmermann Fridolin1112,Anders Ole13,Andrén Henrik14,Bagrade Guna15,Belotti Elisa1617,Breitenmoser‐Würsten Christine11,Bufka Luděk17,Černe Rok18,Drouet‐Hoguet Nolwenn19,Duľa Martin20,Fuxjäger Christian21,Gomerčić Tomislav22,Jędrzejewski Włodzimierz2324,Kont Raido25,Koubek Petr916,Kowalczyk Rafał23,Kusak Josip22,Kubala Jakub2627,Kutal Miroslav20,Linnell John D. C.47,Molinari‐Jobin Anja28,Männil Peep29,Middelhoff Tomma Lilli13,Odden John30,Okarma Henryk2331,Oliveira Teresa8,Pagon Nives18,Persson Jens14,Remm Jaanus2532,Schmidt Krzysztof23,Signer Sven11,Tám Branislav33,Vogt Kristina11,Kuemmerle Tobias134

Affiliation:

1. Geography Department Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

2. Department of Visitor Management and National Park Monitoring Bavarian Forest National Park Grafenau Germany

3. Chair of Wildlife Ecology and Management, Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany

4. Department of Forestry and Wildlife Management Inland Norway University of Applied Science Koppang Norway

5. Department of Ecological Dynamics Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research Berlin Germany

6. Institute of Ecology Technische Universität Berlin Berlin Germany

7. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Trondheim Norway

8. Department of Forestry and Renewable Forest Resources, Biotechnical Faculty University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia

9. Institute of Vertebrate Biology of the Czech Academy of Sciences Brno Czech Republic

10. Department of Zoology, Fisheries, Hydrobiology and Apiculture, Faculty of AgriSciences Mendel University in Brno Brno Czech Republic

11. Foundation KORA Muri bei Bern Switzerland

12. Department of Ecology and Evolution, Biophore, Quartier Sorge University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

13. Harz National Park Wernigerode Germany

14. Grimsö Wildlife Research Station, Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

15. Latvian State Forest Research Institute ‘Silava’ Salaspils Latvia

16. Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Prague Czech Republic

17. Department of Research and Nature Protection Šumava National Park Administration Kašperské Hory Czech Republic

18. Slovenia Forest Service Ljubljana Slovenia

19. OFB ‐ French Biodiversity Agency Gières France

20. Department of Forest Ecology, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology Mendel University in Brno Brno Czech Republic

21. Nationalpark Kalkalpen Nationalpark Zentrum Molln Molln Austria

22. Department of Veterinary Biology University of Zagreb Zagreb Croatia

23. Mammal Research Institute Polish Academy of Sciences Białowieża Poland

24. Centro de Ecología Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas (IVIC) Caracas Venezuela

25. Department of Zoology, Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences University of Tartu Tartu Estonia

26. Department of Applied Zoology and Wildlife Management, Faculty of Forestry Technical University Zvolen Zvolen Slovakia

27. DIANA – Carpathian Wildlife Research Banská Bystrica Slovakia

28. Progetto Lince Italia Tarvisio Italy

29. Estonian Environment Agency Tallinn Estonia

30. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Oslo Norway

31. Institute of Nature Conservation Polish Academy of Sciences Krakow Poland

32. OÜ Rewild Tallinn Estonia

33. National Zoological Garden Bojnice Bojnice Slovakia

34. Integrative Research Institute on Transformation in Human Environment Systems Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

Abstract

AbstractAimThe increasing availability of animal tracking datasets collected across many sites provides new opportunities to move beyond local assessments to enable detailed and consistent habitat mapping at biogeographical scales. However, integrating wildlife datasets across large areas and study sites is challenging, as species' varying responses to different environmental contexts must be reconciled. Here, we compare approaches for large‐area habitat mapping and assess available habitat for a recolonizing large carnivore, the Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx).LocationEurope.MethodsWe use a continental‐scale animal tracking database (450 individuals from 14 study sites) to systematically assess modelling approaches, comparing (1) global strategies that pool all data for training versus building local, site‐specific models and combining them, (2) different approaches for incorporating regional variation in habitat selection and (3) different modelling algorithms, testing nonlinear mixed effects models as well as machine‐learning algorithms.ResultsTesting models on training sites and simulating model transfers, global and local modelling strategies achieved overall similar predictive performance. Model performance was the highest using flexible machine‐learning algorithms and when incorporating variation in habitat selection as a function of environmental variation. Our best‐performing model used a weighted combination of local, site‐specific habitat models. Our habitat maps identified large areas of suitable, but currently unoccupied lynx habitat, with many of the most suitable unoccupied areas located in regions that could foster connectivity between currently isolated populations.Main ConclusionsWe demonstrate that global and local modelling strategies can achieve robust habitat models at the continental scale and that considering regional variation in habitat selection improves broad‐scale habitat mapping. More generally, we highlight the promise of large wildlife tracking databases for large‐area habitat mapping. Our maps provide the first high‐resolution, yet continental assessment of lynx habitat across Europe, providing a consistent basis for conservation planning for restoring the species within its former range.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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