Abstract

Long-term observational studies conducted at large (regional) spatial scales contribute to better understanding of landscape effects on population and evolutionary dynamics, including the conditions that affect long-term viability of species, but large-scale studies are expensive and logistically challenging to keep running for a long time. Here, we describe the long-term metapopulation study of the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) that has been conducted since 1991 in a large network of 4000 habitat patches (dry meadows) within a study area of 50 by 70 km in the Åland Islands in Finland. We explain how the landscape structure has been described, including definition, delimitation, and mapping of the habitat patches; methods of field survey, including the logistics, cost, and reliability of the survey; and data management using the EarthCape biodiversity platform. We describe the long-term metapopulation dynamics of the Glanville fritillary based on the survey. There has been no long-term change in the overall size of the metapopulation, but the level of spatial synchrony and hence the amplitude of fluctuations in year-to-year metapopulation dynamics have increased over the years, possibly due to increasing frequency of exceptional weather conditions. We discuss the added value of large-scale and long-term population studies, but also emphasize the need to integrate more targeted experimental studies in the context of long-term observational studies. For instance, in the case of the Glanville fritillary project, the long-term study has produced an opportunity to sample individuals for experiments from local populations with a known demographic history. These studies have demonstrated striking differences in dispersal rate and other life-history traits of individuals from newly established local populations (the offspring of colonizers) versus individuals from old, established local populations. The long-term observational study has stimulated the development of metapopulation models and provided an opportunity to test model predictions. This combination of empirical studies and modeling has facilitated the study of key phenomena in spatial dynamics, such as extinction threshold and extinction debt.

Highlights

  • Ecological studies of local populations and population processes tend to last for a few years only and typically encompass a small spatial scale (Kareiva and Andersen 1988)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • In highly fragmented landscapes consisting of many small habitat patches, local populations are not likely to persist for a long time because of their generally small size, and long-term persistence and practically anything else related to the biology of the species depend on metapopulation-level processes and call for metapopulation-level studies

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Summary

Introduction

Ecological studies of local populations and population processes tend to last for a few years only and typically encompass a small spatial scale (Kareiva and Andersen 1988). Metapopulation studies typically aim at covering networks of local populations at spatial scales that are at least of the same order of magnitude in size than the average dispersal distance of the focal species. In highly fragmented landscapes consisting of many small habitat patches, local populations are not likely to persist for a long time because of their generally small size, and long-term persistence and practically anything else related to the biology of the species depend on metapopulation-level processes and call for metapopulation-level studies. This study was started in 1991, and it was expanded to its current large spatial scale in 1993, covering a network of 4000 discrete habitat patches (dry meadows) and the respective local populations within an area of 50 by 70 km (Hanski 1999, 2011; Nieminen et al 2004). Map files and current patch outlines (Fig. 4) are transferred to notebook

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Discussion
Findings
A Brief Description of the Functions of the EarthCape Biodiversity Database
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