road ecology wildlife presentation

14
Conserving wildlife biodiversity in a land of roads Dale Steele California Department of Fish and Game

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Presentation I gave regarding road and transportation impacts to wildlife

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Page 1: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Conserving wildlife biodiversity in a land of roads

Dale SteeleCalifornia Department of Fish and Game

Page 2: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Species rarity and richnessin the United States

Based on Precious Heritage, Stein et al. 2000. Used by permission.

High

Low

Page 3: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

California is UNIQUE

Climate + Geology = Speciation = Endemism

Page 4: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

High biological diversity

> 6000 species of plants> 1400 species of

animals, including fish> 1300 vegetation types> 2000 types of distinct

plant associations

Page 5: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Species at risk in California

> 400 Listed plants > 200 Listed animals > 200 Species of Special Concern> 1000 Sensitive plants (CNPS)

Page 6: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

California highway facts• About 15,000 miles of state highways • More than 23.4 million registered vehicles • Annual vehicle miles traveled exceeds 280 billion• Road density averages 1.2 mile/square mile• Highways, streets and adjacent right-of-way total

about 20 million acres • Roads equal about 1 % of the total US land area

Page 7: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Biological concerns• About a fifth of the US land area directly affected

by the road network• Roads generally reduce population size and

increase the risk of population extinction of sensitive species

• Considerable time lag before the full impact to wildlife and natural communities can be seen

• No systematic records of wildlife mortality on US roads

Page 8: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

• Direct loss of habitat • Decrease quality of adjacent habitat• Habitat fragmentation• Roadkills• Impede animal movements

Successful wildlife crossing decreases significantly as roads are upgraded to accommodate greater traffic volume. Smaller populations may result, with a greater potential of genetic problems and increased chance of local extinction.

More ecological effects

Page 9: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

More info needed• Roadkill data spotty and limited • Baseline effects of roads on wildlife,

effectiveness of existing mitigation, and priority locations for additional studies not known

• Little known about long-lasting ecological effects in terms of reduced mobility, increased isolation, and/or splitting of gene pools

• Especially important to determine critical road density at which a population can no longer persist

Page 10: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Strong environmental laws• California Endangered Species Act (CESA)• California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA)• Natural Community Conservation Planning Act

(NCCPA)

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Page 11: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Conservation planning• Ecosystem level

– Multiple species– Natural communities– Ecological

processes– Common as well as

rare species• Science-based• Interconnected reserve

systems

Page 12: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Species selection• Degree of threat or endangerment• Endemism• Highly restricted habitat• Surrogates for ecological processes• Adequacy of inventory/monitoring

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Page 13: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Priorities for planning

• Rapidly-urbanizing regions

• Working landscapes• Collaborative

partnerships• Public support• Funding

Page 14: Road Ecology Wildlife Presentation

Long-term goals• Species recovery• Ecosystem function• Landscape conservation• Compatible land use planning • Statewide resource inventory