Journal article
Monitoring ecological consequences of efforts to restore landscape-scale connectivity
DM Watson, VAJ Doerr, SC Banks, DA Driscoll, R van der Ree, ED Doerr, P Sunnucks
Biological Conservation | Published : 2017
Abstract
Managing and restoring connectivity that enables wildlife movement through landscapes is the primary approach to reduce harmful effects of habitat loss and fragmentation. Improved connectivity is also increasingly invoked as a strategy to mitigate negative impacts of climate change by enabling species to track preferred environments and maintain evolutionary processes. Although initiatives to improve connectivity using restoration are becoming commonplace, we do not know how successful these actions are, nor which mechanisms underlie biotic responses. Most ecological monitoring focuses on site condition or quality rather than those landscape-scale processes that connectivity is intended to f..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the financial support of the New South Wales Government's Environmental Trust and the Great Eastern Ranges Initiative (courtesy of a Slopes to Summit partnership grant) and the Australian Capital Territory Environment and Sustainable Development Directorate. We thank Gary Howling, Sam Niedra, and Kylie Durant for their invaluable workshop contributions and feedback on an earlier version. RvdR was supported by The Baker Foundation.