Roads Flashcards

1
Q

How do roads facilitate economic and social development

A
  • Market access for timber & agricultural products
  • Access to remote areas
  • Lower costs of land clearing
  • Cheap labour
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2
Q

By 2050, how much new road construction is expected, and where will most of it occur?

A
  • 25 million km of new roads are expected by 2050.
  • This represents a 60% increase in the total road length compared to 2010.
  • 90% of the new road construction will take place in developing nations.
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3
Q

What are the Ecological effects of roads

A
  • Habitat loss
  • Road mortality
  • Edge effects
  • Barrier effects and fragmentation
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4
Q

Describe habitat loss to roads

A
  • The initial and most obvious impact of roads/powerlines
  • Road/powerline networks may alter / destroy scarce natural habitats
  • Roads create deforestation (example in the Amazon where this increased fire risk)
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5
Q

Give a satistic to show habitat loss from roads

A

In the Brazillian Amazon:
- Road network has doubled
- >95% of deforestation is within 50km of a road

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6
Q

What species are susceptible to road mortality?

give examples

A
  • Species attracted to roads/roadsides e.g reptiles, herbivores and frugivores, carrion feeders & predators, amphibians (most effected)
  • Species with nearby habitat - wetland, grassy verges, fruit
  • Species with large- area requirements
  • Significant pop. sinks for rare and endangered species
    E.g Florida panther: 4-5 roadkills per year from ~75 individuals
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7
Q

What are edge effects from roads?

A

Roads cause physical, chemical, structural, environmental and biological impacts on the adjacent habitat

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8
Q

How do roads cause pollution

A
  • Chemical emissions = pollution of air, soil and water adjacent to roads
  • Energy emissions in the form of noise, light, vibration and movements = disturb wildlife
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9
Q

How do roads cause habitat decay?

A
  • Changing microclimatic conditions: humidity, light, temp, wind speed and turbulence
  • Increased tree damage and death
  • Increased tree dynamics - turnover, species comp
  • Changes in stream ecology - altered flow patterns → impacts on aquatic & stream bank life
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10
Q

What were the findings of Ware et al. (2015) on the effects of fake roads (using speakers to mimic traffic) on wildlife?

A
  • 31% of birds avoided the ‘road’.
  • Birds that stayed near the road had lower body mass than control groups.
  • Why? Likely due to a vigilance-foraging behavior tradeoff.
  • Understory birds strongly avoid open areas (and therefore roads).
  • Edge-loving gap and canopy species are less affected by roads.
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11
Q

How do roads cause barrier effects?

A
  • Roads act as barriers to gene flow, leading to genetic differentiation among populations.

Smaller, partially isolated populations face greater extinction risks due to:
- Deterministic processes: Limited access to critical resources (food, shelter, space).
- Random demographic changes:
- Population size and structure fluctuations.
- Random environmental changes: Habitat disturbances or disasters.

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12
Q

List some methods to
to limit road mortality

A
  • Barrier fencing
  • Road signs (Do they actually work? Do people actually slow down?)
  • Speed limits Esp in protected areas (What speed is appropriate?)
  • How are they enforced?
  • Windy roads (to slow traffic)
  • Road closures
  • Prohibit hunting (Difficult to enforce)
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13
Q

List some methods to enhance dispersal over roads

A
  • Extend bridges over watercourses and riparian vegetation
  • Allow natural canopy connections
  • Canopy bridges
  • Glider poles
  • Overpasses
  • Underpasses
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14
Q

Are road mitigation methods ecologically and cost effective?

A
  • Often very ££, does it really protect pops?
  • Problem: v few road mitigation actions are experimentally tested
  • Built into initial plans (adequate EIA) vs after realise problem (inadequate/no EIA)
  • Either way need rigorous scientific assessment
  • E.g Optimal planning for mitigating the impacts of roads on wildlife Polak et al. 2014
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15
Q

What is the main proposal of Laurance et al. (2014) “A global strategy for road building”?

A
  • Proposes a global zoning strategy to guide road construction.
  • Balances environmental conservation with human development.

Identifies three types of zones:
- Avoidance zones: High environmental value where roads should not be built.
- Opportunity zones: Areas for road improvements to boost agriculture with minimal environmental harm.
- Conflict zones: Areas where road construction benefits agriculture but poses significant environmental risks.

Aims to minimize ecological damage while supporting sustainable development.

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16
Q

What is a bigger solution to road building

A
  • Focus on preventing the most damaging roads from being built (e.g., in rainforests).
    Recognize that not all roads are bad:
  • Bad roads: In ecologically sensitive areas like rainforests.
  • Good roads: In agricultural lands to enhance development.