Demography and movement in a relocated population of Oregon Spotted Frogs (Rana pretiosa): influence of season and gender

Authors: Nathan D Chelgren; Christopher A Pearl; Michael J Adams; Jay Bowerman
Contribution Number: 284

https://doi.org/10.1643/CH-07-142

Abstract/Summary

Translocation, repatriation and relocation of wildlife are increasingly considered as methods in the management of imperiled wildlife populations. Yet, few such efforts have been studied in sufficient detail to understand demographic responses within specific life stages. We used five years of recapture data and Bayesian estimation to assess seasonal survival, movement and growth of Oregon Spotted Frogs (Rana pretiosa) relocated into created ponds at Dilman Meadow in Oregon, USA. We evaluate hypotheses specific to the relocation and elucidate aspects of R. pretiosa life history that are poorly known. The odds of survival of relocated individuals during the first year following relocation were https://0.36 times the survival odds of relocated and non-relocated frogs after one year since the relocation. Survival rate was higher for large frogs. After accounting for frog size, we found little variation in survival between ponds at Dilman Meadow. Survival was lowest for males during the breeding/post-breeding redistribution period, suggesting a high cost of breeding for males. The highest survival rates occurred during winter for both genders, and one small spring was used heavily during winter but was used rarely during the rest of the year. Individual growth was higher in ponds that were not used for breeding, and increased with increasing pond age. Our study supports other evidence that R. pretiosa use different habitats seasonally and are specific in their overwintering habitat requirements. Because frogs were concentrated during winter, predator-free overwintering springs are likely to be of particular value for R. pretiosa populations.

Publication details
Published Date: 2008-12-18
Outlet/Publisher: Copeia 2008: 742-751
Media Format: .PDF

ARMI Organizational Units:
Pacific Northwest - Biology
Topics:
Management; Monitoring and Population Ecology; Species and their Ecology
Place Names:
Pacific Northwest
Keywords:
habitat; T&E; trends
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