Title
Projecting transition probabilities for regular public roads at the ecoregion scale: A Northern Appalachian/Acadian case study
Author(s)
Baldwin, R.F.; Trombulak, S.C.; Anderson, M.G.; Woolmer, G.
Published
2007
Publisher
Landscape and Urban Planning
Abstract
Existing roads have far-reaching effects on biodiversity, and therefore road network expansion is of critical concern to conservation planning. Road density trend analysis is often too coarse and assumes homogeneous landscapes, whereas spatial transition probability analysis captures landscape variability typical of ecoregions. Simple models for projecting road network growth will assist planning agencies and conservation organizations to guide protection efforts. We investigate growth of regular public roads in the State of Maine over a 17-year historical period, and then use the best-selected (AIC) logistic regression model to validate and then project spatial probability of future roads to the Northern Appalachian/Acadian ecoregion. Nearly 2000 km of new roads were constructed in settled landscapes in Maine 1986-2003, influencing 37,000 ha of adjacent habitats. The majority (93.5%) of the new roads performed local functions and were short (<1/3 km in length), characterized as residential roads typical of sprawl. The best-selected logit model [dwelling density (+), elevation (-), distance to urban area (-), distance to existing primary/secondary highway (-)] captured 84% of reserved new road points in Maine, and only 27% of random points at the >0.5 probability level. The projected model forecasts 0.5 million km of new residential public roads in the Northern Appalachian/Acadian ecoregion for the next two decades, suggesting that cumulative effects of residential road network expansion are a serious region-scale biodiversity threat. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords
Biodiversity; Mathematical models; Probability; Societies and institutions; Strategic planning; Conservation planning; Ecoregion; Logistic regression model; Road networks; Sprawl; Roads and streets; Acadian; biodiversity; conservation planning; ecological impact; ecoregion; landscape change; landscape protection; probability; residential development; road construction; urban planning; Appalachians; Maine; North America; United States

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PUB10716