Connecting the dots: an invariant migration corridor links the Holocene to the present

被引:57
作者
Berger, Joel
Cain, Steven L.
Berger, Kim Murray
机构
[1] Wildlife Conservat Soc, Teton Field Off, Teton Valley, ID 83455 USA
[2] Grand Teton Natl Pk, Div Sci & Resource Management, Moose, WY 83012 USA
[3] Utah State Univ, Dept FRWS, Logan, UT 84321 USA
关键词
corridors; Pleistocene; pronghorn; Antilocapra americana; migration;
D O I
10.1098/rsbl.2006.0508
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Numerous species undergo impressive movements, but due to massive changes in land use, long distance migration in terrestrial vertebrates has become a highly fragile ecological phenomenon. Uncertainty about the locations of past migrations and the importance of current corridors hampers conservation planning. Using archeological data from historic kill sites and modern methods to track migration, we document an invariant, 150 km ( one-way) migration corridor used for at least 6000 years by North America's sole extant endemic ungulate. Pronghorn ( Antilocapra americana) from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, like other long distant migrants including Serengeti wildebeest ( Connochaetes taurinus) and Arctic caribou ( Rangifer tarandus), move nearly 50 km d(-1), but in contrast to these other species, rely on an invariant corridor averaging only 2 km wide. Because an entire population accesses a national park ( Grand Teton) by passage through bottlenecks as narrow as 121 m, any blockage to movement will result in extirpation. Based on animation of real data coupled with the loss of six historic routes, alternative pathways throughout the 60 000 km(2) Yellowstone ecosystem are no longer available. Our findings have implications for developing strategies to protect long distance land migrations in Africa, Asia and North America and to prevent the disappearance of ecological phenomena that have operated for millennia.
引用
收藏
页码:528 / 531
页数:4
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