Identifying Habitat Productivity Thresholds to Assess the Effects of Drought on a Specialist Folivore
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Published:2024-09-04
Issue:17
Volume:16
Page:3279
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ISSN:2072-4292
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Container-title:Remote Sensing
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Remote Sensing
Author:
Kotzur Ivan1ORCID, Moore Ben D.1, Meakin Chris2, Evans Maldwyn J.3ORCID, Youngentob Kara N.3
Affiliation:
1. Hawkesbury Institute for Environment, Western Sydney University, Richmond, NSW 2753, Australia 2. Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, Australian Government, Canberra, ACT 2600, Australia 3. Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
Abstract
Climate change has altered the frequency and severity of extreme weather, which can affect vegetation condition and habitat quality for wildlife. Declines in vegetation productivity during droughts and heatwaves can negatively impact animals that depend on vegetation for water and nutrition. We used the normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI) to look at relationships between vegetation productivity and the presence of koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus) in potential habitat throughout much of their range. Using a large, long-term koala presence dataset, we tested the hypothesis that locations where koalas had been observed would exhibit higher NDVI values than a random, representative sample from the same vegetation group. We also identified the minimum NDVI threshold at which koalas occurred across time for each vegetation group and compared these to the minimum NDVI values across potential koala habitat before and during the Millennium Drought, one of the worst recorded in Australia. Additionally, we investigated whether vegetation above the minimum NDVI thresholds was significantly closer to perennial water than unsuitable vegetation. We found that koalas tend to occur at locations with higher NDVI than average for all vegetation groups. Prior to the drought, 49% of potential koala habitat maintained a minimum NDVI above the koalas’ threshold, equating to 190,227 km2, which declined to 166,746 km2 during drought (i.e., a 12% reduction). We also found that unsuitable vegetation tended to occur farther from perennial water than suitable vegetation for some vegetation groups. Areas that remained above the NDVI thresholds during the drought should be considered potential refugia for populations during an event of similar magnitude and could indicate future habitat extent.
Funder
NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water
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