Article ID: | iaor2005261 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 147 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 11 |
End Page Number: | 21 |
Publication Date: | Jan 2002 |
Journal: | Ecological Modelling |
Authors: | Hof J., Uresk D.W., Schenbeck G.L., Bevers M. |
A spatial optimization model was formulated and used to maximize black-tailed prairie dog populations in the Badlands National Park and the Buffalo Gap National Grasslands in South Dakota. The choice variables involved the strategic placement of limited additional protected habitat. Population dynamics were captured in formulations that reflected exponential population growth combined with the recalcitrant dispersal behavior of this social mammal that is important to many other species. The model results are compared to a previous paper which modeled the black-footed ferret, an aggressive disperser that is dependent upon prairie dogs for food and shelter.