A Mixed Modeling Approach to Predict the Effect of Environmental Modification on Species Distributions

F. Cozzoli, M. Eelkema, T.J. Bouma, T. Ysebaert, V. Escaravage, P.M.J. Herman

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    22 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Human infrastructures can modify ecosystems, thereby affecting the occurrence and spatial distribution of organisms, as well as ecosystem functionality. Sustainable development requires the ability to predict responses of species to anthropogenic pressures. We investigated the large scale, long term effect of important human alterations of benthic habitats with an integrated approach combining engineering and ecological modelling. We focused our analysis on the Oosterschelde basin (The Netherlands), which was partially embanked by a storm surge barrier (Oosterscheldekering, 1986). We made use of 1) a prognostic (numerical) environmental (hydrodynamic) model and 2) a novel application of quantile regression to Species Distribution Modeling (SDM) to simulate both the realized and potential (habitat suitability) abundance of four macrozoobenthic species: Scoloplos armiger, Peringia ulvae, Cerastoderma edule and Lanice conchilega. The analysis shows that part of the fluctuations in macrozoobenthic biomass stocks during the last decades is related to the effect of the coastal defense infrastructures on the basin morphology and hydrodynamics. The methodological framework we propose is particularly suitable for the analysis of large abundance datasets combined with high-resolution environmental data. Our analysis provides useful information on future changes in ecosystem functionality induced by human activities.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere89131
    JournalPLoS ONE
    Volume9
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2014

    Keywords

    • cockles cerastoderma-edule
    • natural animal assemblages
    • quantile regression
    • lanice-conchilega
    • body-size
    • ecosystem engineers
    • sediment transport
    • hydrobia-ulvae
    • abundance
    • oosterschelde

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