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Living on the edge: quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Living on the edge: quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England. / Riutta, Terhi; Slade, Eleanor M.; Morecroft, M.D. et al.
In: Landscape Ecology, Vol. 29, No. 6, 07.2014, p. 949-961.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Riutta, T, Slade, EM, Morecroft, MD, Bebber, DP & Malhi, Y 2014, 'Living on the edge: quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England', Landscape Ecology, vol. 29, no. 6, pp. 949-961. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-014-0025-z

APA

Riutta, T., Slade, E. M., Morecroft, M. D., Bebber, D. P., & Malhi, Y. (2014). Living on the edge: quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England. Landscape Ecology, 29(6), 949-961. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-014-0025-z

Vancouver

Riutta T, Slade EM, Morecroft MD, Bebber DP, Malhi Y. Living on the edge: quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England. Landscape Ecology. 2014 Jul;29(6):949-961. Epub 2014 May 4. doi: 10.1007/s10980-014-0025-z

Author

Riutta, Terhi ; Slade, Eleanor M. ; Morecroft, M.D. et al. / Living on the edge : quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England. In: Landscape Ecology. 2014 ; Vol. 29, No. 6. pp. 949-961.

Bibtex

@article{78a6985b131c41a5916994af125eb2d4,
title = "Living on the edge: quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England",
abstract = "Forest ecosystems have been widely fragmented by human land use, inducing significant microclimatic and biological changes at the forest edge. If we are to rigorously assess the ecological impacts of habitat fragmentation, there is a need to effectively quantify the amount of edge habitat within a landscape, and to allow this to be modelled for individual species and processes. Edge effect may extend only a few metres or as far as several kilometres, depending on the species or process in question. Therefore, rather than attempting to quantify the amount of edge habitat by using a fixed, case-specific distance to distinguish between edge and core, the area of habitat within continuously-varying distances from the forest edge is of greater utility. We quantified the degree of fragmentation of forests in England, where forests cover 10 % of the land area. We calculated the distance from within the forest patches to the nearest edge (forest vs. non-forest) and other landscape indices, such as mean patch size, edge density and distance to the nearest neighbour. Of the total forest area, 37 % was within 30 m and 74 % within 100 m of the nearest edge. This highlights that, in fragmented landscapes, the habitats close to the edge form a considerable proportion of the total habitat area. We then show how these edge estimates can be combined with ecological response functions, to allow us to generate biologically meaningful estimates of the impacts of fragmentation at a landscape scale.",
keywords = "GIS, Ancient woodland, Landscape metrics, Upscaling, UK",
author = "Terhi Riutta and Slade, {Eleanor M.} and M.D. Morecroft and D.P. Bebber and Yadvinder Malhi",
year = "2014",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1007/s10980-014-0025-z",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "949--961",
journal = "Landscape Ecology",
issn = "0921-2973",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Living on the edge

T2 - quantifying the structure of a fragmented forest landscape in England

AU - Riutta, Terhi

AU - Slade, Eleanor M.

AU - Morecroft, M.D.

AU - Bebber, D.P.

AU - Malhi, Yadvinder

PY - 2014/7

Y1 - 2014/7

N2 - Forest ecosystems have been widely fragmented by human land use, inducing significant microclimatic and biological changes at the forest edge. If we are to rigorously assess the ecological impacts of habitat fragmentation, there is a need to effectively quantify the amount of edge habitat within a landscape, and to allow this to be modelled for individual species and processes. Edge effect may extend only a few metres or as far as several kilometres, depending on the species or process in question. Therefore, rather than attempting to quantify the amount of edge habitat by using a fixed, case-specific distance to distinguish between edge and core, the area of habitat within continuously-varying distances from the forest edge is of greater utility. We quantified the degree of fragmentation of forests in England, where forests cover 10 % of the land area. We calculated the distance from within the forest patches to the nearest edge (forest vs. non-forest) and other landscape indices, such as mean patch size, edge density and distance to the nearest neighbour. Of the total forest area, 37 % was within 30 m and 74 % within 100 m of the nearest edge. This highlights that, in fragmented landscapes, the habitats close to the edge form a considerable proportion of the total habitat area. We then show how these edge estimates can be combined with ecological response functions, to allow us to generate biologically meaningful estimates of the impacts of fragmentation at a landscape scale.

AB - Forest ecosystems have been widely fragmented by human land use, inducing significant microclimatic and biological changes at the forest edge. If we are to rigorously assess the ecological impacts of habitat fragmentation, there is a need to effectively quantify the amount of edge habitat within a landscape, and to allow this to be modelled for individual species and processes. Edge effect may extend only a few metres or as far as several kilometres, depending on the species or process in question. Therefore, rather than attempting to quantify the amount of edge habitat by using a fixed, case-specific distance to distinguish between edge and core, the area of habitat within continuously-varying distances from the forest edge is of greater utility. We quantified the degree of fragmentation of forests in England, where forests cover 10 % of the land area. We calculated the distance from within the forest patches to the nearest edge (forest vs. non-forest) and other landscape indices, such as mean patch size, edge density and distance to the nearest neighbour. Of the total forest area, 37 % was within 30 m and 74 % within 100 m of the nearest edge. This highlights that, in fragmented landscapes, the habitats close to the edge form a considerable proportion of the total habitat area. We then show how these edge estimates can be combined with ecological response functions, to allow us to generate biologically meaningful estimates of the impacts of fragmentation at a landscape scale.

KW - GIS

KW - Ancient woodland

KW - Landscape metrics

KW - Upscaling

KW - UK

U2 - 10.1007/s10980-014-0025-z

DO - 10.1007/s10980-014-0025-z

M3 - Journal article

VL - 29

SP - 949

EP - 961

JO - Landscape Ecology

JF - Landscape Ecology

SN - 0921-2973

IS - 6

ER -