Authors
Lars A Brudvig, Ellen I Damschen, Joshua J Tewksbury, Nick M Haddad, Douglas J Levey
Publication date
2009/6/9
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
106
Issue
23
Pages
9328-9332
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Conservation efforts typically focus on maximizing biodiversity in protected areas. The space available for reserves is limited, however, and conservation efforts must increasingly consider how management of protected areas can promote biodiversity beyond reserve borders. Habitat corridors are considered an important feature of reserves because they facilitate movement of organisms between patches, thereby increasing species richness in those patches. Here we demonstrate that by increasing species richness inside target patches, corridors additionally benefit biodiversity in surrounding non-target habitat, a biodiversity “spillover” effect. Working in the world's largest corridor experiment, we show that increased richness extends for approximately 30% of the width of the 1-ha connected patches, resulting in 10–18% more vascular plant species around patches of target habitat connected by corridors than …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
LA Brudvig, EI Damschen, JJ Tewksbury, NM Haddad… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009