Intraspecific variation in habitat relationships for pygmy rabbits: Implications for conservation of habitat specialists

Author:

Rush Lindsey M.12,Svancara Leona K.13,Smith Ian T.1,Knetter Sonya J.4,Karl Jason W.5,Rachlow Janet L.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Fish and Wildlife Sciences University of Idaho Moscow Idaho USA

2. Bureau of Land Management Burley Idaho USA

3. Idaho Department of Fish and Game Moscow Idaho USA

4. Idaho Department of Fish and Game Boise Idaho USA

5. Department of Forest, Rangeland and Fire Sciences University of Idaho Moscow Idaho USA

Abstract

AbstractEnvironmental relationships can differ across the geographic range of species, especially for widespread generalists. Because habitat specialists are more vulnerable to environmental changes, incorrect assumptions about consistent habitat associations could hinder strategic conservation efforts. We used species distribution models (SDMs) to evaluate intraspecific variation in habitat associations for a habitat specialist of conservation concern, the pygmy rabbit (Brachylagus idahoensis), which is endemic to the sagebrush biome of the western United States. Our goal was to model habitat associations for pygmy rabbits across a portion of their range to evaluate regional variation and contrast predictions with results from a model developed at the rangewide extent. We created inductive SDMs using maximum entropy methods within five ecological regions that encompassed about 20% of the species rangewide distribution and spanned diverse environmental gradients. We included a suite of environmental predictor variables representing topography, vegetation, climate, and soil characteristics. Results of the regional models identified substantial variation in habitat associations across the five regions, with each retaining a unique set of environmental predictors. Bioclimatic variables were the most influential environmental parameters in all five regions, but the specific variables differed. The models developed at regional extents predicted smaller areas of habitat (an average of 15% less for suitable habitat and 80% less for primary habitat) than predictions generated from a model developed at the rangewide extent. Because bioclimatic variables were effective in discriminating areas used by pygmy rabbits, they also provided an opportunity to assess potential changes in habitat distribution by incorporating future climate projections. Distributions modeled under two mid‐century emission scenarios projected substantial reductions in suitable habitat for pygmy rabbits across most regions and pronounced variation among regions in the magnitude and direction of the climate effects. Collectively, results of this work underscore the need to incorporate regional variation in habitat associations into planning for current and future conservation and management strategies.

Funder

Idaho Department of Fish and Game

University of Idaho

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference124 articles.

1. AdaptWest Project.2015.“Gridded Current and Future Climate Data for North America at 1‐km Resolution Interpolated Using the ClimateNA v5.10 Software (Wang et al. 2015).”https://adaptwest.databasin.org.

2. Range-wide patterns of greater sage-grouse persistence

3. Assessing the accuracy of species distribution models: prevalence, kappa and the true skill statistic (TSS)

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