TY - JOUR KW - Climatic extremes KW - coefficient of variation KW - environmental diversity KW - habitat management KW - landscape ecology KW - microclimatic variability KW - specialist species AU - Oliver Tom H. AU - Roy D. B. AU - Hill Jane K. AU - Brereton Tom M. AU - Thomas Chris D. AB -

Habitat heterogeneity is often suggested as being important for the stability of populations, and promoted as a means to aid the conservation of species, but the evidence for such an assumption is poor. Here we show that heterogeneous landscapes that contain a variety of suitable habitat types are associated with more stable population dynamics for 35 British butterfly species from 166 sites. In addition, topographic heterogeneity may also promote stability. Our results were robust to different measures of population variability, differences in mean abundance among sites, and to the spatial scale (radius 1–5 km around the centres of sites) at which landscapes were analysed. Responses to landscape heterogeneity differed among species; for more mobile ‘wider-countryside’ species, habitat heterogeneity at larger landscape scales had the strongest effect on population dynamics. We suggest that heterogeneous landscapes offer a greater range of resources and microclimates, which can buffer populations against climatic variation and generate more stable population dynamics.

BT - Ecology Letters DA - 2010 DB - Wiley Online Library DO - 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2010.01441.x IS - 4 LA - en N2 -

Habitat heterogeneity is often suggested as being important for the stability of populations, and promoted as a means to aid the conservation of species, but the evidence for such an assumption is poor. Here we show that heterogeneous landscapes that contain a variety of suitable habitat types are associated with more stable population dynamics for 35 British butterfly species from 166 sites. In addition, topographic heterogeneity may also promote stability. Our results were robust to different measures of population variability, differences in mean abundance among sites, and to the spatial scale (radius 1–5 km around the centres of sites) at which landscapes were analysed. Responses to landscape heterogeneity differed among species; for more mobile ‘wider-countryside’ species, habitat heterogeneity at larger landscape scales had the strongest effect on population dynamics. We suggest that heterogeneous landscapes offer a greater range of resources and microclimates, which can buffer populations against climatic variation and generate more stable population dynamics.

PY - 2010 SN - 1461-0248 SP - 473 EP - 484 T2 - Ecology Letters TI - Heterogeneous landscapes promote population stability VL - 13 Y2 - 2013-07-15 14:26:13 ER -