Abstract

Road and railroad verges may contribute to nature conservation by providing habitat for many species, but due to limited resources, there is a need to select the most important road and railroad stretches for adapted management. We explore the responsibility species concept as a tool for the Swedish Transport Administration to make this selection. We propose lists of candidate responsibility species based on relative abundance of conservation priority species in the vicinity of roads and railroads, respectively. Abundance data were derived from crowd-sourced species observations. Species with ≥20% of observations in infrastructure habitats were included as candidate responsibility species. For roads 32 species were included in the list, for railroads seven species, with an overlap of three species between the lists. We analyzed habitat and management requirements of the listed species to try identifying functional groups. Most of the species require open or semi-open habitats, mainly dry grassland or heathland on sandy or limy soil, un-sprayed crop fields, or solitary trees. Host plants or substrates include broom (genus Genista), patches of bare soil, and sun exposed wood. Conservation actions prescribed for the species include, e.g., late or irregular mowing, removal of the field layer, planting of host species, protecting and providing particular substrates, and special protection of certain sites. We argue that road and railroad managers are particularly well suited to conduct most of these actions. We consider the responsibility species concept to be a useful tool for transportation agencies to set priorities for adapted verge management, and the current method to be effective in identifying a first list of candidate species. We discuss the possibility of also identifying responsibility habitats or general management measures based on the results. Nature Conservation 11: 143–158 (2015) doi: 10.3897/natureconservation.11.4433 http://natureconservation.pensoft.net Copyright Jan-Olof Helldin et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. RESEARCH ARTICLE Launched to accelerate biodiversity conservation A peer-reviewed open-access journal

Highlights

  • While the transportation infrastructure has many negative impacts on wildlife, such as habitat loss, disturbance, pollution, mortality and barrier to movements, road and railroad verges may provide important habitat for many species (Way 1977, Forman et al 2003, Huijser and Clevenger 2006)

  • We consider the responsibility species concept to be a useful tool for transportation agencies to set priorities for adapted verge management, and the current method to be effective in identifying a first list of candidate species

  • There was an overlap of three species: the longhorn beetle Phytoecia nigricornis, the bee Anthophora plagiata, and the leaf mining moth Phyllonorycter staintoniella

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Summary

Introduction

While the transportation infrastructure has many negative impacts on wildlife, such as habitat loss, disturbance, pollution, mortality and barrier to movements, road and railroad verges may provide important habitat for many species (Way 1977, Forman et al 2003, Huijser and Clevenger 2006). Transportation corridors offer a variety of substrates, soil-types and nutrient levels on a small scale, and in agricultural regions, urban areas, and other highly modified landscapes, road and railroad verges may be the only semi-natural habitat that remain (Thomas et al 2002, Forman et al 2003, Huijser and Clevenger 2006). As being present in most landscapes, the green network formed by semi-natural strips along roads and railroads has been labelled “a centerpiece of conservation” (Forman et al 2003)

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