Marmots from space: assessing population size and habitat use of a burrowing mammal using publicly available satellite images
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Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation
Abstract
Social, burrowing mammals such as prairie dogs, ground squirrels or marmots are
keystone species in grassland ecosystems. Grasslands have been converted into
cropland or pastures globally, yet it remains virtually unknown how this has
affected the biogeography of burrowing mammals, as efficient, broad-scale survey
methods are lacking. We aimed to test whether structures created by burrowing
rodents can be reliably detected on publicly available, very-high-resolution satellite
images, in order to assess rodent distribution and abundance. We identified burrows
of Bobak marmot (Marmota bobak), a keystone burrowing steppe rodent, on
1300 randomly selected plots of 1 km diameter (78.53 ha) across the species’ range
(~950 000 km²) in Kazakhstan and southern Russia using Google Earth and Bing
images. We then used burrow occurrences and species distribution models to map
marmot distribution. We assessed how marmot occurrence and density vary across
land-use types. We also combined satellite-based burrow densities and ground-survey
data to derive a new population estimate for the species across Kazakhstan.
We mapped a total of 7425 burrows from the satellite imagery. Field visits at a
subsample of burrows suggested that burrow occurrence was detected reliably.
Broad-scale marmot distribution was mainly determined by summer rainfall, land
use and elevation. Occurrence probability was highest on arable croplands, followed
by abandoned croplands and grazed steppe. The current Bobak marmot
population size for Kazakhstan was estimated at 6.1 ( 2.4) million individuals.
Our results demonstrate that publicly available, very-high-resolution images can be
used to reliably map the distribution of burrowing mammals across large geographic
scales. The observed and predicted distributions indicate that the Bobak’s
range has remained almost unchanged in Kazakhstan since the 1950s, despite several
drastic episode of land-use change. This suggests that burrowing mammals
can be remarkably resilient to land-use pressure, questioning prevailing narratives
of population collapse in these species following agricultural expansion.
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Citation
Marmots from space: assessing population size and habitat use of a burrowing mammal using publicly available satellite images/ Koshkina A. [et al.] // Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation. - 2020. - Vol.6. - №2. - pp.153–167.