Title of article
Sex and seasonal differences in the spatial terrestrial distribution of gray treefrog (Hyla versicolor) populations Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Jarrett R. Johnson، نويسنده , , Jason H. Knouft، نويسنده , , Raymond D. Semlitsch، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
9
From page
250
To page
258
Abstract
Fragmentation of terrestrial landscapes has exacerbated the need to understand the spatial requirements of organisms, especially those that undergo seasonal migrations, such as pond-breeding amphibians. Pond-breeding amphibians spend much of their lives in terrestrial habitat at some distance from aquatic breeding sites. The terrestrial habitat required by a particular individual encompasses the area adjacent to a breeding pond that is used for activities such as foraging or overwintering, as well as the expanses of habitat through which it moves. To elucidate amphibian spatial habitat requirements, we monitored gray treefrog (Hyla versicolor) movements through terrestrial habitat adjacent to breeding ponds using radiotelemetry and mark–recapture along transects of artificial refugia. Results indicate that gray treefrogs frequently make migrations between foraging grounds, overwintering sites, and breeding ponds of 200 m or more, with a maximum-recorded movement distance of 330 m. Additionally, females travel farther than males for reasons independent of body size, and the distribution of males during the breeding season is biased towards breeding ponds relative to the non-breeding season. The data illustrate the importance of habitat directly adjacent to breeding sites for males, and indicate that habitat loss resulting in small patches may have a greater negative impact on females than males, and consequently may have disproportionately large effects on population persistence. These results emphasize that effective management of amphibian breeding locations via protection of both aquatic and adjacent upland terrestrial resources likely requires detailed information regarding variation in movements between the sexes and among seasonal activity periods.
Keywords
AmphibianAnuranArboreal refugiaCore habitatFragmentationLandscape complementationMigrationRadiotelemetry
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
838049
Link To Document