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Dive into the research topics where Alexa J. McKerrow is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexa J. McKerrow.


PLOS ONE | 2014

The southern megalopolis: using the past to predict the future of urban sprawl in the Southeast U.S.

Adam Terando; Jennifer K. Costanza; Curtis M. Belyea; Robert R. Dunn; Alexa J. McKerrow; Jaime A. Collazo

The future health of ecosystems is arguably as dependent on urban sprawl as it is on human-caused climatic warming. Urban sprawl strongly impacts the urban ecosystems it creates and the natural and agro-ecosystems that it displaces and fragments. Here, we project urban sprawl changes for the next 50 years for the fast-growing Southeast U.S. Previous studies have focused on modeling population density, but the urban extent is arguably as important as population density per se in terms of its ecological and conservation impacts. We develop simulations using the SLEUTH urban growth model that complement population-driven models but focus on spatial pattern and extent. To better capture the reach of low-density suburban development, we extend the capabilities of SLEUTH by incorporating street-network information. Our simulations point to a future in which the extent of urbanization in the Southeast is projected to increase by 101% to 192%. Our results highlight areas where ecosystem fragmentation is likely, and serve as a benchmark to explore the challenging tradeoffs between ecosystem health, economic growth and cultural desires.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Representation of Ecological Systems within the Protected Areas Network of the Continental United States

Jocelyn L. Aycrigg; Anne Davidson; Leona K. Svancara; Kevin J. Gergely; Alexa J. McKerrow; J. Michael Scott

If conservation of biodiversity is the goal, then the protected areas network of the continental US may be one of our best conservation tools for safeguarding ecological systems (i.e., vegetation communities). We evaluated representation of ecological systems in the current protected areas network and found insufficient representation at three vegetation community levels within lower elevations and moderate to high productivity soils. We used national-level data for ecological systems and a protected areas database to explore alternative ways we might be able to increase representation of ecological systems within the continental US. By following one or more of these alternatives it may be possible to increase the representation of ecological systems in the protected areas network both quantitatively (from 10% up to 39%) and geographically and come closer to meeting the suggested Convention on Biological Diversity target of 17% for terrestrial areas. We used the Landscape Conservation Cooperative framework for regional analysis and found that increased conservation on some private and public lands may be important to the conservation of ecological systems in Western US, while increased public-private partnerships may be important in the conservation of ecological systems in Eastern US. We have not assessed the pros and cons of following the national or regional alternatives, but rather present them as possibilities that may be considered and evaluated as decisions are made to increase the representation of ecological systems in the protected areas network across their range of ecological, geographical, and geophysical occurrence in the continental US into the future.


Avian Conservation and Ecology | 2012

Use of Occupancy Models to Evaluate Expert Knowledge-based Species-Habitat Relationships

Monica N. Iglecia; Jaime A. Collazo; Alexa J. McKerrow

Expert knowledge-based species-habitat relationships are used extensively to guide conservation planning, particularly when data are scarce. Purported relationships describe the initial state of knowledge, but are rarely tested. We assessed support in the data for suitability rankings of vegetation types based on expert knowledge for three terrestrial avian species in the South Atlantic Coastal Plain of the United States. Experts used published studies, natural history, survey data, and field experience to rank vegetation types as optimal, suitable, and marginal. We used single-season occupancy models, coupled with land cover and Breeding Bird Survey data, to examine the hypothesis that patterns of occupancy conformed to species-habitat suitability rankings purported by experts. Purported habitat suitability was validated for two of three species. As predicted for the Eastern Wood-Pewee (Contopus virens) and Brown-headed Nuthatch (Sitta pusilla), occupancy was strongly influenced by vegetation types classified as “optimal habitat” by the species suitability rankings for nuthatches and wood-pewees. Contrary to predictions, Red-headed Woodpecker (Melanerpes erythrocephalus) models that included vegetation types as covariates received similar support by the data as models without vegetation types. For all three species, occupancy was also related to sampling latitude. Our results suggest that covariates representing other habitat requirements might be necessary to model occurrence of generalist species like the woodpecker. The modeling approach described herein provides a means to test expert knowledge-based species-habitat relationships, and hence, help guide conservation planning. RESUME. Les relations especes-habitat etablies a partir des connaissances d’experts sont largement utilisees pour orienter la planification de la conservation, surtout lorsque les donnees sont rares. Ces relations presumees representent les rudiments de la connaissance, mais sont rarement testees. L’adequation du classement de milieux etabli par des experts a ete evaluee pour trois especes de passereaux de la Plaine cotiere de l’Atlantique Sud, aux Etats-Unis. Les experts ont utilise des donnees publiees (recherches, histoire naturelle, releves) et leur experience sur le terrain afin de classer les milieux selon trois categories, soit optimaux, adequats ou marginaux. Nous avons applique des modeles de presence, fondes sur une seule saison, a des donnees d’occupation du sol et de releves d’oiseaux nicheurs afin d’examiner l’hypothese voulant que les profils de presence concordent avec le classement de la qualite des milieux presume par les experts. La qualite presumee des milieux a ete validee pour deux des trois especes. Comme predit pour le Pioui de l’Est (Contopus virens) et la Sittelle a tete brune (Sitta pusilla), la presence de l’espece s’est revelee fortement liee aux milieux classes comme « optimaux » pour les sittelles et les piouis. Contrairement aux predictions pour le Pic a tete rouge (Melanerpes erythrocephalus), les modeles qui incluaient les milieux comme covariables etaient equivalents aux modeles qui ne les incluaient pas. Chez les trois especes, la presence etait aussi correlee a la latitude de l’echantillonnage. Nos resultats semblent indiquer qu’il serait peut-etre necessaire d’inclure des covariables relatives a d’autres besoins en matiere d’habitat afin de modeliser la presence d’especes generalistes comme le pic. L’approche de modelisation decrite dans cette etude permet de tester les relations especes-habitat etablies d’apres les connaissances d’experts et, par consequent, contribue a orienter la planification de la conservation.


Ecological Applications | 2015

Future land‐use scenarios and the loss of wildlife habitats in the southeastern United States

Sebastián Martinuzzi; John C. Withey; Anna M. Pidgeon; Andrew J. Plantinga; Alexa J. McKerrow; Steven G. Williams; David P. Helmers; Volker C. Radeloff

Land-use change is a major cause of wildlife habitat loss. Understanding how changes in land-use policies and economic factors can impact future trends in land use and wildlife habitat loss is therefore critical for conservation efforts. Our goal here was to evaluate the consequences of future land-use changes under different conservation policies and crop market conditions on habitat loss for wildlife species in the southeastern United States. We predicted the rates of habitat loss for 336 terrestrial vertebrate species by 2051. We focused on habitat loss due to the expansion of urban, crop, and pasture. Future land-use changes following business-as-usual conditions resulted in relatively low rates of wildlife habitat loss across the entire Southeast, but some ecoregions and species groups experienced much higher habitat loss than others. Increased crop commodity prices exacerbated wildlife habitat loss in most ecoregions, while the implementation of conservation policies (reduced urban sprawl, and payments for land conservation) reduced the projected habitat loss in some regions, to a certain degree. Overall, urban and crop expansion were the main drivers of habitat loss. Reptiles and wildlife species associated with open vegetation (grasslands, open woodlands) were the species groups most vulnerable to future land-use change. Effective conservation of wildlife habitat in the Southeast should give special consideration to future land-use changes, regional variations, and the forces that could shape land-use decisions.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2015

Modeling climate change, urbanization, and fire effects on Pinus palustris ecosystems of the southeastern U.S.

Jennifer K. Costanza; Adam Terando; Alexa J. McKerrow; Jaime A. Collazo

Managing ecosystems for resilience and sustainability requires understanding how they will respond to future anthropogenic drivers such as climate change and urbanization. In fire-dependent ecosystems, predicting this response requires a focus on how these drivers will impact fire regimes. Here, we use scenarios of climate change, urbanization and management to simulate the future dynamics of the critically endangered and fire-dependent longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) ecosystem. We investigated how climate change and urbanization will affect the ecosystem, and whether the two conservation goals of a 135% increase in total longleaf area and a doubling of fire-maintained open-canopy habitat can be achieved in the face of these drivers. Our results show that while climatic warming had little effect on the wildfire regime, and thus on longleaf pine dynamics, urban growth led to an 8% reduction in annual wildfire area. The management scenarios we tested increase the ecosystems total extent by up to 62% and result in expansion of open-canopy longleaf by as much as 216%, meeting one of the two conservation goals for the ecosystem. We find that both conservation goals for this ecosystem, which is climate-resilient but vulnerable to urbanization, are only attainable if a greater focus is placed on restoration of non-longleaf areas as opposed to maintaining existing longleaf stands. Our approach demonstrates the importance of accounting for multiple relevant anthropogenic threats in an ecosystem-specific context in order to facilitate more effective management actions.


Gcb Bioenergy | 2017

Bioenergy production and forest landscape change in the southeastern United States

Jennifer K. Costanza; Robert C. Abt; Alexa J. McKerrow; Jaime A. Collazo

Production of woody biomass for bioenergy, whether wood pellets or liquid biofuels, has the potential to cause substantial landscape change and concomitant effects on forest ecosystems, but the landscape effects of alternative production scenarios have not been fully assessed. We simulated landscape change from 2010 to 2050 under five scenarios of woody biomass production for wood pellets and liquid biofuels in North Carolina, in the southeastern United States, a region that is a substantial producer of wood biomass for bioenergy and contains high biodiversity. Modeled scenarios varied biomass feedstocks, incorporating harvest of ‘conventional’ forests, which include naturally regenerating as well as planted forests that exist on the landscape even without bioenergy production, as well as purpose‐grown woody crops grown on marginal lands. Results reveal trade‐offs among scenarios in terms of overall forest area and the characteristics of the remaining forest in 2050. Meeting demand for biomass from conventional forests resulted in more total forest land compared with a baseline, business‐as‐usual scenario. However, the remaining forest was composed of more intensively managed forest and less of the bottomland hardwood and longleaf pine habitats that support biodiversity. Converting marginal forest to purpose‐grown crops reduced forest area, but the remaining forest contained more of the critical habitats for biodiversity. Conversion of marginal agricultural lands to purpose‐grown crops resulted in smaller differences from the baseline scenario in terms of forest area and the characteristics of remaining forest habitats. Each scenario affected the dominant type of land‐use change in some regions, especially in the coastal plain that harbors high levels of biodiversity. Our results demonstrate the complex landscape effects of alternative bioenergy scenarios, highlight that the regions most likely to be affected by bioenergy production are also critical for biodiversity, and point to the challenges associated with evaluating bioenergy sustainability.


Gcb Bioenergy | 2017

Projected gains and losses of wildlife habitat from bioenergy-induced landscape change

Nathan M. Tarr; Matthew J. Rubino; Jennifer K. Costanza; Alexa J. McKerrow; Jaime A. Collazo; Robert C. Abt

Domestic and foreign renewable energy targets and financial incentives have increased demand for woody biomass and bioenergy in the southeastern United States. This demand is expected to be met through purpose‐grown agricultural bioenergy crops, short‐rotation tree plantations, thinning and harvest of planted and natural forests, and forest harvest residues. With results from a forest economics model, spatially explicit state‐and‐transition simulation models, and species–habitat models, we projected change in habitat amount for 16 wildlife species caused by meeting a renewable fuel target and expected demand for wood pellets in North Carolina, USA. We projected changes over 40 years under a baseline ‘business‐as‐usual’ scenario without bioenergy production and five scenarios with unique feedstock portfolios. Bioenergy demand had potential to influence trends in habitat availability for some species in our study area. We found variation in impacts among species, and no scenario was the ‘best’ or ‘worst’ across all species. Our models projected that shrub‐associated species would gain habitat under some scenarios because of increases in the amount of regenerating forests on the landscape, while species restricted to mature forests would lose habitat. Some forest species could also lose habitat from the conversion of forests on marginal soils to purpose‐grown feedstocks. The conversion of agricultural lands on marginal soils to purpose‐grown feedstocks increased habitat losses for one species with strong associations with pasture, which is being lost to urbanization in our study region. Our results indicate that landscape‐scale impacts on wildlife habitat will vary among species and depend upon the bioenergy feedstock portfolio. Therefore, decisions about bioenergy and wildlife will likely involve trade‐offs among wildlife species, and the choice of focal species is likely to affect the results of landscape‐scale assessments. We offer general principals to consider when crafting lists of focal species for bioenergy impact assessments at the landscape scale.


Fisheries | 2017

Long-Term Fish Monitoring in Large Rivers: Utility of “Benchmarking” across Basins

David L. Ward; Andrew F. Casper; Timothy D. Counihan; Jennifer M. Bayer; Ian R. Waite; John J. Kosovich; Colin G. Chapman; Elise R. Irwin; Jennifer S. Sauer; Brian S. Ickes; Alexa J. McKerrow

In business, benchmarking is a widely used practice of comparing your own business processes to those of other comparable companies and incorporating identified best practices to improve performance. Biologists and resource managers designing and conducting monitoring programs for fish in large river systems tend to focus on single river basins or segments of large rivers, missing opportunities to learn from those conducting fish monitoring in other rivers. We briefly examine five long-term fish monitoring programs in large rivers in the United States (Colorado, Columbia, Mississippi, Illinois, and Tallapoosa rivers) and identify opportunities for learning across programs by detailing best monitoring practices and why these practices were chosen. Although monitoring objectives, methods, and program maturity differ between each river system, examples from these five case studies illustrate the important role that long-term monitoring programs play in interpreting temporal and spatial shifts in fish populat...


Landscape Ecology | 2016

Normalized burn ratios link fire severity with patterns of avian occurrence

Eli T. Rose; Theodore R. Simons; Rob Klein; Alexa J. McKerrow

ContextRemotely sensed differenced normalized burn ratios (DNBR) provide an index of fire severity across the footprint of a fire. We asked whether this index was useful for explaining patterns of bird occurrence within fire adapted xeric pine-oak forests of the southern Appalachian Mountains.ObjectivesWe evaluated the use of DNBR indices for linking ecosystem process with patterns of bird occurrence. We compared field-based and remotely sensed fire severity indices and used each to develop occupancy models for six bird species to identify patterns of bird occurrence following fire.MethodsWe identified and sampled 228 points within fires that recently burned within Great Smoky Mountains National Park. We performed avian point counts and field-assessed fire severity at each bird census point. We also used Landsat™ imagery acquired before and after each fire to quantify fire severity using DNBR. We used non-parametric methods to quantify agreement between fire severity indices, and evaluated single season occupancy models incorporating fire severity summarized at different spatial scales.ResultsAgreement between field-derived and remotely sensed measures of fire severity was influenced by vegetation type. Although occurrence models using field-derived indices of fire severity outperformed those using DNBR, summarizing DNBR at multiple spatial scales provided additional insights into patterns of occurrence associated with different sized patches of high severity fire.ConclusionsDNBR is useful for linking the effects of fire severity to patterns of bird occurrence, and informing how high severity fire shapes patterns of bird species occurrence on the landscape.


Conservation Biology | 2001

The Scientific Foundations of Habitat Conservation Plans: a Quantitative Assessment

Elaine K. Harding; Elizabeth E. Crone; Bret D. Elderd; Jonathan M. Hoekstra; Alexa J. McKerrow; John D. Perrine; Jim Regetz; Leslie J. Rissler; Amanda Stanley; Eric L. Walters

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Jaime A. Collazo

North Carolina State University

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Jennifer K. Costanza

North Carolina State University

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Kevin J. Gergely

United States Geological Survey

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Adam Terando

United States Geological Survey

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Robert C. Abt

North Carolina State University

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Steven G. Williams

North Carolina State University

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Todd Earnhardt

North Carolina State University

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Anna M. Pidgeon

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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