Large-scale recovery of an endangered amphibian despite ongoing exposure to multiple stressors

Authors: Roland A Knapp; Gary M Fellers; Patrick M Kleeman; David AW Miller; V T Vredenburg; Erica B Rosenblum; Cheryl J Briggs
Contribution Number: 555

pnas.org/content/early/2016/09/28/1600983113.full

Abstract/Summary

Amphibians are one of the most threatened animal groups, with 32% of species at risk of extinction. Given this, is the disappearance of a large fraction of the Earth’s amphibians inevitable, or are some declining species more resilient than is generally assumed? We address this question in a species that is emblematic of many declining amphibians, the endangered Sierra Nevada yellow-legged frog (Rana sierrae). Based on >7,000 frog surveys conducted across Yosemite National Park over a 20-year period, we show that after decades of decline and despite ongoing exposure to multiple stressors including introduced fish, the recently emerged disease chytridiomycosis, and pesticides, R. sierrae abundance increased 7-fold during the study and at a rate of 11% per year. These increases occurred in hundreds of populations throughout Yosemite, providing a rare example of amphibian recovery at an ecologically relevant spatial scale. Results from a laboratory experiment indicate that these increases may be due in part to reduced frog susceptibility to chytridiomycosis. The disappearance of nonnative fish from numerous water bodies following cessation of stocking also contributed to the recovery. The large-scale increases in R. sierrae abundance we document suggest that when habitats are relatively intact and stressors are reduced in their importance by active management or species’ adaptive responses declines of some amphibian may be partially reversible, at least at a regional scale. Other studies conducted over similarly large temporal and spatial scales are critically needed to provide insight and generality about the reversibility of amphibian declines at a global scale.

Publication details
Published Date: 2016-10-03
Outlet/Publisher: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, doi: 10.1073/pnas.1600983113
Media Format: .PDF

ARMI Organizational Units:
Southwest, Northern California - Biology
Topics:
Disease; Monitoring and Population Ecology; Species and their Ecology; Stressors
Place Names:
California; Yosemite National Park
Keywords:
amphibians; ARMI; Chytridiomycosis; ecology; introduced species; occupancy; pesticides; pond-breeding amphibians; population; survival
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