The distribution of vertebrate roadkill varies by season, surrounding environment, and animal class
Metadata
Show full item recordMateria
Animal-vehicle collisions Road ecology Wildlife management Mammals Roadkill mortality
Date
2023-04-03Referencia bibliográfica
Arca-Rubio, J., Moreno-Rueda, G. & Ortega, Z. The distribution of vertebrate roadkill varies by season, surrounding environment, and animal class. Eur J Wildl Res 69, 42 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10344-023-01669-z
Sponsorship
Funding for open access publishing: Universidad de Granada/ CBUA. Zaida Ortega was funded by a postdoctoral talent-attraction contract from the Junta de Andalucía, co-funded with European Commission funds.Abstract
Due to rapid human expansion in the last century, wildlife roadkill is becoming a concerning threat to biodiversity and
human safety. The frequency of roadkill events depends on factors related to specific traits of the road—tortuosity or the
presence of fences, among others—and the animal ecology—such as activity patterns, reproductive season, or thermoregulation. These, in turn, are related to environmental factors, with seasonal variations. Here, we assessed roadkill mortality
of terrestrial vertebrates over the year. To do this, we sampled 10 road sections (of 3 km, by walk) in the south of Spain
for a full year, registering the carcasses of run-over vertebrates. Then, we analysed the spatiotemporal patterns of roadkill
events for the four vertebrates’ classes and the effects of road traits (presence of fence, tortuosity, distance to water point)
and environmental variables (mean temperature and precipitation). Mammals suffered the highest mortality by roadkill
(45.72%). The frequency of collisions was independent of tortuosity, presence of fences, and precipitation, while mean
temperature significantly increased the probability of collision of mammals, birds, and reptiles. There was a seasonal effect
in the number of collisions, which spatial pattern depended on the class of vertebrates. All this leads us to conclude that,
to reduce the impact caused by roadkill mortality on wildlife, we need specific measures to be taken timely in each critical
place and for each vertebrate group