Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/46864
Title: Assessment of roadkill likelihood methods: the use of single occurences versus hotspots for different taxa
Other Titles: Avaliação dos métodos de probabilidade de atropelamentos: o uso de simples ocorrências versus hotspots para diferentes taxa
Authors: Grilo, Clara
Passamani, Marcelo
Teixeira, Fernanda Zimmermann
Rosa, Clarissa Alves da
Keywords: Hotspots
Rodovias - Atropelamentos
Modelos de presença
Mortalidade em rodovias
Software Maxent
Software Siriema
Presence-only models
Road mortality
Roadkill
Issue Date: 18-Aug-2021
Publisher: Universidade Federal de Lavras
Citation: CORRÊA, M. S. Assessment of roadkill likelihood methods: the use of single occurences versus hotspots for different taxa. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ecologia Aplicada) – Universidade Federal de Lavras, Lavras, 2021.
Abstract: Roads are responsible for a massive mortality of wildlife annually. In order to define measures to reduce roadkill risk many studies have analyzed the spatial environmental variables that explain roadkill likelihood. There are several approaches to conduct this type of analysis such as modelling the roadkill presence-only (high quantity and low quality of the data) or the incidence of roadkill (hereafter hotspots) (low quantity and high quality of the data). However, there is no consensus on which one is the best to generate the most accurate and robust results. We aimed to compare which type of records (only roadkill, spatial hotspots, or spatio-temporal hotspots) generate better model performance and the variables that better explain the roadkill likelihood. We analyzed roadkill records of two species in each class of terrestrial vertebrates collected in Brazil: amphibians (Leptodactylus latrans and Rhinella icterica), reptiles (Philodryas patagoniensis and Helicops infrataeniatus), birds (Volatinia jacarina and Nothura maculosa), and mammals (Didelphis albiventris and Myocastor coypus). We used the Siriema software to identity roadkill hotspots, and the MaxEnt software to analyze the relationship between the three types of records with the environmental variables. All models had a high performance (AUC > 0.7). Our findings suggest that MaxEnt models performance were better with hotspots. In general, the environmental variables that explained roadkill were consistent with species habitats and no differences were found between habitat specialist and generalist species Therefore, we recommend the use of hotspots for modeling the roadkill risk for either habitat specialist and generalist species.
URI: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/46864
Appears in Collections:Ecologia Aplicada - Mestrado (Dissertações)



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