Potential biodiversity map of lizard species in Southern Patagonia: Environmental characterization, desertification influence and analyses of protection areas: Supplementary material
posted on 2018-05-16, 13:47authored byYamina Micaela Rosas, Pablo Luis Peri, Guillermo Martínez Pastur
The
distribution of biodiversity at the landscape level is shaped by biotic,
abiotic and anthropogenic factors. Biodiversity maps provide the basis for
defining management and conservation strategies that can minimize human
impacts. The objective was to elaborate a map of potential biodiversity of
lizards based on habitat suitability maps of individual species in Santa Cruz
(Argentina). Also, we analysed desertification influence and the
representativeness of the current network of protected areas on the lizard
biodiversity. For this, we used a database of eight lizard species and we
explored 41 potential explanatory variables to develop habitat suitability
maps, which were combined to obtain one single map of the potential
biodiversity. We analysed the outputs in a GIS project using the marginality
and the specialization indexes and the normalized difference vegetation index
of each species. Also, we characterized the potential biodiversity using the
following variables: desertification, ecological areas and current network of
protected areas. We detected differences in the occupied niches for the
different species throughout the landscape. The map of potential biodiversity
uncovered hotspots of biodiversity in the north-east study area, where the
prevalence of unique climatic conditions showed a dry steppe and a high degree
of desertification due to the human impacts (e.g. livestock). These results can
be readily used as a support system for conservation and management strategies
at different scale levels in areas with higher human impacts or to develop new
protection areas.