Do Wildlife Corridors Really Work?

When human urban habitat runs into the terrain of other species, the results can be traumatic for many of the parties involved.Take coastal southern California, which has seen a big population boom in the past couple of decades. As people built skyscrapers and condos and highways to accommodate their growing numbers, they inadvertently split up the natural habitats of lizards and birdsbobcats and coyotes, and loads of other species. Isolated to much smaller patches of habitat (not to mention surrounded by metal, concrete and plastic), the animals wind up with a much smaller gene pool, making them more susceptible to disease, climate change and natural disaster.Since the 1960s, a solution often trumpeted by conservationists is to build a “wildlife corridor”: a green pathway that connects one patch of habitat to another, allowing species to move across wider areas despite human developments. These corridors exist or are being built all over the world, from jaguar habitat in the Americas to hardwood forests in Bhutan to tropical rainforests in Australia.But two active corridor builders are now questioning whether the approach is a good one.Read more at...Smithsonian's Surprising Science, February 2012.

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