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http://hdl.handle.net/10174/5130
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Title: | Spatial patterns of road kills: a case study in Southern Portugal |
Authors: | Ascensão, Fernando Mira, António |
Keywords: | Road-kills Spatial patterns Portugal |
Issue Date: | 2006 |
Publisher: | ICOET |
Citation: | Ascens˜ao F and Mira A. 2006. Spatial patterns of road kills: a case study in
Southern Portugal. IN: Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on
Ecology and Transportation, Eds. Irwin CL, Garrett P, McDermott KP. Cen-
ter for Transportation and the Environment, North Carolina State University,
Raleigh, NC: pp. 641-646. |
Abstract: | Roads promote high levels of animal-vehicle collisions and have one of the
most visible man-made impacts on wildlife. In Portugal, SW Europe, very
few ecological studies have focused on the impacts from roads on vertebrates.
Knowledge of the main factors driving the emergence of hotspots of vertebrate
mortality is still scarce. A segment of a main road 26-km long was sampled by
car at an average speed of 20 km/h every two weeks for two years (54 surveys)
between 1995 and 1997, collecting all road-killed specimens found. We defined
road sections with high collision rates, or vertebrate-mortality hotspots (VMH),
by detecting clusters of animal collision locations. The analysis was conducted
by comparing the spatial pattern of road kills with that expected in a random
situation. In such a condition, the likelihood of collisions for each road section
would show a Poisson distribution. Differences of explanatory variables between
hotspots and low-mortality sections were evaluated with the Mann-Whitney
U-test. Also, a direct-gradient analysis (Canonical Correspondence Analysis
(CCA)) was executed with the mortality rates of the 24 most-killed species and
the explanatory variables considered. A total of 2421 vertebrate road-killed
specimens were collected, which corresponded to nearly 46 specimens per 0.5
km per year. Eighty non-domestic species were recorded. Several sections were
defined as VMH, both for all observations and for each vertebrate class. Results
suggested that some road sections should receive particular mitigation actions
given that mortality hotspots may arise, particularly sections where montado
is the dominant habitat and where stream and other water courses run nearby
and parallel to the road. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/5130 |
Type: | lecture |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais BIO - Comunicações - Em Congressos Científicos Internacionais
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