Trends in Wildlife Connectivity Science from the Biodiverse and Human‑Dominated South Asia

Prachi Thatte, Abhinav Tyagi, Amrita Neelakantan, Meghana Natesh, Mihika Sen, Tarsh Thekaekara

Abstract


The threat of habitat fragmentation and population isola‑ tion looms large over much of biodiversity in this human-dominated epoch. Species-rich South Asia is made particularly vulnerable by its high human density and anthropogenic habitat modifcation. Therefore, reliably estimating wildlife connectivity and the factors underpinning it become crucial in mitigating extinction risk due to isolation. We ana‑ lysed peer-reviewed literature on connectivity and corridors for terrestrial mammals in South Asia to identify trends in connectivity research. We identify key research gaps and highlight future directions that may aid efforts to robustly study connectivity. We found a signifcant bias towards charismatic megafauna and their habitats. Methodologically, although we observed a range of approaches refecting some of the advances and innovations in the feld, several studies lacked data on animal move‑ ment/behaviour, leading to potentially biased inferences of how species disperse through human-modifed landscapes. New avenues for con‑ nectivity research, though currently under-explored in South Asia, offer alternatives to the heavily used but less-reliable habitat suitability mod‑ els. We highlight the advantages of landscape genetic methods that refect effective dispersal and are made feasible through non-invasive and increasingly more cost-effective sampling methods. We also iden‑ tify important gaps or areas of focus that need to be addressed going forward, including accounting for animal movement/behaviour, human impacts and landscape change for dynamic and adaptive connectivity planning for the future

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