Diversity (Mar 2023)

The Factors Influencing Wildlife to Use Existing Bridges and Culverts in Giant Panda National Park

  • Song Lu,
  • Ying Yue,
  • Yihong Wang,
  • Dawei Zhang,
  • Biao Yang,
  • Zhen Yu,
  • Honghui Lin,
  • Qiang Dai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/d15040487
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
p. 487

Abstract

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Roads, acting as barriers, hamper wildlife movements and disrupt habitat connectivity. Bridges and culverts are common structures on roads, and some of them can function to allow wildlife passage. This study investigated the effects of traffic, the surrounding landscape, human disturbance, and bridge and culvert structures on the utilization of bridges and culverts as dedicated passages by wildlife, using motion-activated infrared camera traps along a 64 km road in Giant Panda National Park, Sichuan, China. The results show that both species richness and counts of wildlife recorded at the bridge and culvert were significantly lower than those observed at sites distant from roads. No large-sized wildlife was recorded at the bridges and culverts. Human activities and traffic volume significantly and negatively affect medium-sized wildlife utilization of bridges and culverts. We conclude that bridges and culverts serve as wildlife crossings, but their efficacy is weak. This emphasizes the necessity of retrofitting bridges and culverts via mitigation facilities such as noise and light barriers, and vegetation restoration on both sides of the roads in Giant Panda National Park.

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