Authors
Joshua J Tewksbury, Douglas J Levey, Nick M Haddad, Sarah Sargent, John L Orrock, Aimee Weldon, Brent J Danielson, Jory Brinkerhoff, Ellen I Damschen, Patricia Townsend
Publication date
2002/10/1
Journal
Proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Volume
99
Issue
20
Pages
12923-12926
Publisher
The National Academy of Sciences
Description
Among the most popular strategies for maintaining populations of both plants and animals in fragmented landscapes is to connect isolated patches with thin strips of habitat, called corridors. Corridors are thought to increase the exchange of individuals between habitat patches, promoting genetic exchange and reducing population fluctuations. Empirical studies addressing the effects of corridors have either been small in scale or have ignored confounding effects of increased habitat area created by the presence of a corridor. These methodological difficulties, coupled with a paucity of studies examining the effects of corridors on plants and plant–animal interactions, have sparked debate over the purported value of corridors in conservation planning. We report results of a large-scale experiment that directly address this debate. In eight large-scale experimental landscapes that control for patch area and test …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JJ Tewksbury, DJ Levey, NM Haddad, S Sargent… - Proceedings of the national academy of sciences, 2002