Abstract
Simple SummaryMost wildlife habitat studies are yet to adopt a multi-scale framework. Our study of the winter habitat selection of red deer (Cervus elaphus) is based on a multi-scale model and shows the importance of taking different scales into account when investigating habitat selection. Our approach captures a wide spectrum of ecological relationships of a population, results in effective conservation planning, and is readily applicable to other species of wildlife. Efficacy of future habitat selection studies will benefit by taking a multi-scale approach. In addition to potentially providing increased explanatory power and predictive capacity, multi-scale habitat models enhance our understanding of the scales at which species respond to their environment, which is critical knowledge required to implement effective conservation and management strategies.Single-scale frameworks are often used to analyze the habitat selections of species. Research on habitat selection can be significantly improved using multi-scale models that enable greater in-depth analyses of the scale dependence between species and specific environmental factors. In this study, the winter habitat selection of red deer in the Gogostaihanwula Nature Reserve, Inner Mongolia, was studied using a multi-scale model. Each selected covariate was included in multi-scale models at their “characteristic scale”, and we used an all subsets approach and model selection framework to assess habitat selection. The results showed that: (1) Univariate logistic regression analysis showed that the response scale of red deer to environmental factors was different among different covariate. The optimal scale of the single covariate was 800–3200 m, slope (SLP), altitude (ELE), and ratio of deciduous broad-leaved forests were 800 m in large scale, except that the farmland ratio was 200 m in fine scale. The optimal scale of road density and grassland ratio is both 1600 m, and the optimal scale of net forest production capacity is 3200 m; (2) distance to forest edges, distance to cement roads, distance to villages, altitude, distance to all road, and slope of the region were the most important factors affecting winter habitat selection. The outcomes of this study indicate that future studies on the effectiveness of habitat selections will benefit from multi-scale models. In addition to increasing interpretive and predictive capabilities, multi-scale habitat selection models enhance our understanding of how species respond to their environments and contribute to the formulation of effective conservation and management strategies for ungulata.
Highlights
Examining habitat selection is one way to assess the importance of habitat to species conservation, but making such assessments is not always straightforward, even for well-studied species
“Multi-scale” habitat selection modeling refers to any approach that seeks to identify the scale, or scales, at which the organism interacts with the environment to determine it being found in, or doing better in, one place over another
We used a habitat selection model with a multi-scale framework to study the habitat selection of red deer, and the optimization of the scale of the model
Summary
Examining habitat selection is one way to assess the importance of habitat to species conservation, but making such assessments is not always straightforward, even for well-studied species. Animals 2020, 10, 2454 knowledge of habitat selection and its underlying dynamics at multiple scales; and second, the practical limitations on sampling that stem, in part, from these conceptual issues. A multi-scale habitat selection study is of great significance for an overall understanding of the ecological habits of animals and the targeted protection and management of wild populations [1]. We used a habitat selection model with a multi-scale framework to study the habitat selection of red deer, and the optimization of the scale of the model. Based on the multi-scale habitat selection model, a suitable habitat for red deer was predicted to provide a reference for a strategy to conserve and recover red deer and its habitat
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