ROADS AND THEIR MAJOR ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
- Vol. 29 (1) , 207-231
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.29.1.207
Abstract
▪ Abstract A huge road network with vehicles ramifies across the land, representing a surprising frontier of ecology. Species-rich roadsides are conduits for few species. Roadkills are a premier mortality source, yet except for local spots, rates rarely limit population size. Road avoidance, especially due to traffic noise, has a greater ecological impact. The still-more-important barrier effect subdivides populations, with demographic and probably genetic consequences. Road networks crossing landscapes cause local hydrologic and erosion effects, whereas stream networks and distant valleys receive major peak-flow and sediment impacts. Chemical effects mainly occur near roads. Road networks interrupt horizontal ecological flows, alter landscape spatial pattern, and therefore inhibit important interior species. Thus, road density and network structure are informative landscape ecology assays. Australia has huge road-reserve networks of native vegetation, whereas the Dutch have tunnels and overpasses perforating road barriers to enhance ecological flows. Based on road-effect zones, an estimated 15–20% of the United States is ecologically impacted by roads.Keywords
This publication has 77 references indexed in Scilit:
- Noninvasive Physiological Measures of Disturbance in the Northern Spotted OwlConservation Biology, 1997
- Peak Flow Responses to Clear‐Cutting and Roads in Small and Large Basins, Western Cascades, OregonWater Resources Research, 1996
- Forest roads and landscape structure in the southern Rocky MountainsLandscape Ecology, 1996
- Effectiveness of roadside verges as dispersal corridors for small ground-dwelling animals: A simulation studyLandscape and Urban Planning, 1995
- Modeling Effects of Land Management in the Brazilian Amazonian Settlement of RondôniaConservation Biology, 1994
- Tourist vehicles as vectors of weed seeds in Kakadu National Park, Northern AustraliaBiological Conservation, 1994
- Water quality in mountain ash forests — separating the impacts of roads from those of logging operationsJournal of Hydrology, 1993
- The deposition of selected pollutants adjacent to a major rural highwayAtmospheric Environment. Part A. General Topics, 1991
- Migration and control of purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria L.) along highway corridorsEnvironmental Management, 1989
- Lead concentrations in small mammals living near highwaysEnvironmental Pollution (1970), 1977