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Infusing considerations of trophic dependencies into species distribution modelling
Authors:Anne M. Trainor  Oswald J. Schmitz
Affiliation:1. School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, , New Haven, CT, 06511 USA;2. The Nature Conservancy, , Arlington, VA, 22203 USA
Abstract:Community ecology involves studying the interdependence of species with each other and their environment to predict their geographical distribution and abundance. Modern species distribution analyses characterise species‐environment dependency well, but offer only crude approximations of species interdependency. Typically, the dependency between focal species and other species is characterised using other species’ point occurrences as spatial covariates to constrain the focal species’ predicted range. This implicitly assumes that the strength of interdependency is homogeneous across space, which is not generally supported by analyses of species interactions. This discrepancy has an important bearing on the accuracy of inferences about habitat suitability for species. We introduce a framework that integrates principles from consumer–resource analyses, resource selection theory and species distribution modelling to enhance quantitative prediction of species geographical distributions. We show how to apply the framework using a case study of lynx and snowshoe hare interactions with each other and their environment. The analysis shows how the framework offers a spatially refined understanding of species distribution that is sensitive to nuances in biophysical attributes of the environment that determine the location and strength of species interactions.
Keywords:Consumer–  resource  geospatial niche theory  predator–  prey interaction  resource selection theory  species distribution modelling  trophic interaction distribution modelling
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