Designing nature networks for cities: combining multi-species modelling approaches
Anna M. Bracken, Luca Nelli, Luigi Cao Pinna, Alistair Corbett, Rory McLeod, Davide M. Dominoni, Dominic J. McCafferty

TL;DR
The paper compares two methods for identifying ecological corridors in cities to improve pollinator habitats and suggests combining them for better urban biodiversity planning.
Contribution
The study introduces a species-specific modeling approach for identifying ecological pinch points and advocates for integrating it with planning frameworks.
Findings
Both approaches identified 39 km² of overlapping corridors.
31 pinch points were found outside planner-defined corridors, suggesting areas for improvement.
Species-specific modeling enhances understanding of movement constraints.
Abstract
Urban wildlife habitats are often fragmented and of poor quality, yet cities hold potential to support biodiversity, particularly for small-bodied species like insect pollinators. Enhancing habitat connectivity is essential for improving biodiversity and increasingly prioritised in planning frameworks. Combining diverse approaches to assess habitat connectivity may yield the greatest overall success. We compare two multi-species modelling approaches for assessing urban ecological corridors. The first species-specific approach uses combined habitat suitability maps of four insect pollinators and assesses connectivity using resistance modelling (circuit theory). The second landscape-level approach has been developed by urban environmental planners (“Green Network Development officers”) and identifies core areas as species-rich habitat patches using spatial data, species records (of plant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWildlife-Road Interactions and Conservation · Species Distribution and Climate Change · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
