Abstract

Ecological processes are strongly shaped by human landscape modification, and understanding the reciprocal relationship between ecosystems and modified landscapes is critical for informed conservation. Single axis measures of spatial heterogeneity proliferate in the contemporary gradient ecology literature, though they are unlikely to capture the complexity of ecological responses. Here, we develop a standardized approach for defining multi-dimensional gradients of human influence in heterogeneous landscapes and demonstrate this approach to analyze landscape characteristics of ten ecologically distinct US cities. Using occupancy data of a common human-adaptive songbird collected in each of the cities, we then use our dual-axis gradients to evaluate the utility of our approach. Spatial analysis of landscapes surrounding ten US cities revealed two important axes of variation that are intuitively consistent with the characteristics of multi-use landscapes, but are often confounded in single axis gradients. These were, a hard-to-soft gradient, representing transition from developed areas to non-structural soft areas; and brown-to-green, differentiating between two dominant types of soft landscapes: agriculture (brown) and natural areas (green). Analysis of American robin occurrence data demonstrated that occupancy responds to both hard-to-soft (decreasing with development intensity) and brown-to-green gradient (increasing with more natural area). Overall, our results reveal striking consistency in the dominant sources of variation across ten geographically distinct cities and suggests that our approach advances how we relate variation in ecological responses to human influence. Our case study demonstrates this: robins show a remarkably consistent response to a gradient differentiating agricultural and natural areas, but city-specific responses to the more traditional gradient of development intensity, which would be overlooked with a single gradient approach. Managing ecological communities in human dominated landscapes is extremely challenging due to a lack of standardized approaches and a general understanding of how socio-ecological systems function, and our approach offers promising solutions.

Highlights

  • Rapid expansion of the global human population has led to increasing concern for natural systems and biodiversity

  • Well documented variability in the quality, complexity, and ecological relevance of quantitative measurements of landscape structure have contributed to a lack of a general and scalable understanding of how ecological processes respond to landscape heterogeneity, along gradients of human modification [3,4,5,6]

  • Efforts to improve the ecological relevance and realism of landscape metrics has led to the development of models thought to better represent the continuous nature of landscape heterogeneity and ecological processes by extending the patch-centered perspective to incorporate the composition of the surrounding landscape [14]

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Summary

Introduction

Rapid expansion of the global human population has led to increasing concern for natural systems and biodiversity. The need for ecologically meaningful measures of landscape heterogeneity (i.e., composition and configuration of landscape features) to understand drivers of ecosystem responses is well recognized [7], and over time numerous conceptual, theoretical, and applied approaches have been posited [4, 5, 8, 9]. These approaches range from the patch mosaic (fragmentation) paradigm, which, while valuable in some contexts, is arguably overly simple in heterogenous landscapes [10,11,12], to various metrics of patch complexity and distribution [13]. Reliable and accurate measures of landscape heterogeneity are a prerequisite to understanding patterns of ecological response across scales

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