Authors
Ellen I Damschen, Nick M Haddad, John L Orrock, Joshua J Tewksbury, Douglas J Levey
Publication date
2006/9/1
Journal
Science
Volume
313
Issue
5791
Pages
1284-1286
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Habitat fragmentation is one of the largest threats to biodiversity. Landscape corridors, which are hypothesized to reduce the negative consequences of fragmentation, have become common features of ecological management plans worldwide. Despite their popularity, there is little evidence documenting the effectiveness of corridors in preserving biodiversity at large scales. Using a large-scale replicated experiment, we showed that habitat patches connected by corridors retain more native plant species than do isolated patches, that this difference increases over time, and that corridors do not promote invasion by exotic species. Our results support the use of corridors in biodiversity conservation.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
EI Damschen, NM Haddad, JL Orrock, JJ Tewksbury… - Science, 2006