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856 record(s) found.

Papers & Reports Population characteristics of Siren lacertina and Amphiuma means in north Florida
Authors: K Sorensen
Date: 2004 | Outlet: Southeastern Naturalist 3: 249-258
Papers & Reports Detection probabilities and site occupancy estimates for amphibians at Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge
Authors: L L Smith; William J Barichivich; J S Staiger; K G Smith; Kenneth C Dodd
Date: 2006 | Outlet: American Midland Naturalist 155: 149-161
We conducted an amphibian inventory at Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge from August 2000 to June 2002 as part of the U.S. Department of the Interior's national Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative. Nineteen species of amphibians (15 anurans and 4 caudates) were documented within the Refuge, including one protected species, the Gopher Frog Rana capito. We also collected 1 y of monitoring data for amphibian populations and incorporated the results into the inventory. Detection probabilities and site occupancy estimates for four species, the Pinewoods Treefrog (Hyla femoralis), Pig Frog (Rana grylio), Southern Leopard Frog (R. sphenocephala)and Carpenter Frog (R virgatipes) are presented here. Detection probabilities observed in this study indicate that spring and summer surveys offer the best opportunity to detect these species in the Refuge. Results of the inventory suggest that substantial changes may have occurred in the amphibian fauna within and adjacent to the swamp. However, monitoring the amphibian community of Okefenokee Swamp will prove difficult because of the logistical challenges associated with a rigorous statistical assessment of status and trends.
Papers & Reports Plethodon jordani (Jordan's Salamander) – Vocalization
Authors: K G Smith; William J Barichivich
Date: 2001 | Outlet: Herpetological Review 34: 246-247
Papers & Reports Keystone predators (eastern newts, Notophthalmus viridescens) reduce the impacts of an aquatic invasive species
Authors: K G Smith
Date: 2006 | Outlet: Oecologia 148: 342-349
Predation, competition, and their interaction are known to be important factors that influence the structure of ecological communities. In particular, in those cases where a competitive hierarchy exists among prey species, the presence of certain keystone predators can result in enhanced diversity in the prey community. However, little is known regarding the influence of keystone predator presence on invaded prey communities. Given the widespread occurrence of invasive species and substantial concern regarding their ecological impacts, studies on this topic are needed. In this study I used naturalistic replications of an experimental tadpole assemblage to assess the influence of predatory eastern newts, Notophthalmus viridescens, on the outcome of interspecific competition among native and nonindigenous tadpoles. When newts were absent, the presence of the tadpoles of one invasive species, the Cuban treefrog, Osteopilus septentrionalis, resulted in decreased survival and growth rate of the dominant native species, Bufo terrestris, and dominance of the tadpole assemblage by O. septentrionalis. However, the presence of one adult newt generally reduced or eliminated the negative impacts of O. septentrionalis tadpoles, resulting in comparable survival and performance of native species in invaded and noninvaded treatments. Differential mortality among the tadpole species suggests that newts preyed selectively on O. septentrionalis tadpoles, supporting the hypothesis that newts acted as keystone predators in the invaded assemblage. The presence of nonindigenous larval cane toads, Bufo marinus, did not significantly affect native species, and this species was not negatively affected by the presence of newts. Collectively, these results suggest that eastern newts significantly modified the competitive hierarchy of the invaded tadpole assemblage and reduced the impacts of a competitively superior invasive species. If general, these results suggest that the presence of certain species may be an essential factor regulating the ecological impacts of biological invasions.
Papers & Reports Effects of nonindigenous tadpoles on native tadpoles in Florida – Evidence of competition
Authors: K G Smith
Date: 2005 | Outlet: Biological Conservation 123: 433-441
The impacts of nonindigenous species on native ecosystems can be severe, sometimes leading to the extinction of native taxa. Interspecific competition is a potential mechanism of negative impact of invasive species, but few studies have conclusively demonstrated competition between native and nonindigenous taxa. In this study I used experimental manipulations to examine the competitive effects of the larvae of two widely introduced anurans, the cane toad, Bufo marinus, and the Cuban treefrog, Osteopilus septentrionalis, on the growth and development of the larvae of two native anurans (the southern toad, Bufo terrestris, and the green treefrog, Hyla cinerea). The presence of O. septentrionalis larvae consistently impacted growth and development of native larvae, resulting in reduced growth rates and delayed metamorphosis of both native species and smaller mass at metamorphosis of B. terrestris. Hyla cinerea larvae transformed at greater body masses when reared with the rapidly transforming nonindigenous species as a result of competitive release. The negative effects of O. septentrionalis on native larvae were generally significant whether native tadpoles were exposed to O. septentrionalis alone or in combination with B. marinus. In contrast, B. marinus tadpoles did not significantly impact the growth or development of either native species. Neither nonindigenous species significantly decreased the survivorship of native larvae, although a trend toward decreased survivorship was evident for H. cinerea. These results suggest that nonindigenous larval anurans may adversely impact native tadpole communities as a result of interspecific competition.
Papers & Reports An exploratory assessment of Cuban Treefrog (Osteopilus septentrionalis) tadpoles as predators of native and nonindigenous tadpoles in Florida
Authors: K G Smith
Date: 2005 | Outlet: Amphibia-Reptilia 26: 571-575
Short note on the interaction between Cuban treefrog tadpoles and other tadpoles.
Papers & Reports Osteopilus septentrionalis (Cuban treefrog) – Reproductive behavior
Authors: K G Smith
Date: 2004 | Outlet: Herpetological Review 35: 374-375
Papers & Reports Phylogenetic relationships of the endangered Shenandoah salamander (Plethodon shenandoah) and other salamanders of the P. cinereus Group (Caudata: Plethodontidae).
Authors: J W Sites; M Morando; R Highton; F Huber; R E Jung
Date: 2004 | Outlet: Journal of Herpetology 38: 96-105
Papers & Reports Species boundaries, phylogeography, and conservation genetics of the red-legged frog (Rana aurora/draytonii) complex
Authors: H B Shaffer; Gary M Fellers; S R Voss; J C Oliver; G Pauly
Date: 2004 | Outlet: Molecular Ecology 13: 2667-2677
Papers & Reports The Genetics of Amphibian Decline: Population Substructure and Molecular Differentiation in the Yosemite Toad
Authors: H B Shaffer; Gary M Fellers; A Magee; S R Voss
Date: 2000 | Outlet: Molecular Ecology 9: 245-257
Papers & Reports Management of amphibian populations through translocation – Response to Marsh and Trenham
Authors: R A Seigel; Kenneth C Dodd
Date: 2002 | Outlet: Conservation Biology 16: 552-554
Papers & Reports Eleutherodactylus augusti (Dugés, 1879), Barking Frog
Authors: Cecil R Schwalbe; Caren S Goldberg
Date: 2005 | Outlet: Lannoo M, editor. Amphibian declines: the conservation status of United States species. Berkeley: University of California Press 491-492
Papers & Reports Influence of Ribeiroia ondatrae (Trematoda: Digenea) infection on limb development and survival of Northern leopard frogs (Rana pipiens) – Effects of host-stage and parasite exposure level
Authors: A Schotthoefer; A Koehler; C U Meteyer; R A Cole
Date: 2003 | Outlet: Canadian Journal of Zoology 81: 1144-1153
Papers & Reports Relationship of tadpole stage to location of echinostome cecarial encystment and the consequences for tadpole survival
Authors: A Schotthoefer; R A Cole; Val R Beasley
Date: 2003 | Outlet: Journal of Parisitology 89: 475-482
Papers & Reports An evaluation of weather and disease as causes of decline in two populations of boreal toads
Authors: R D Scherer; Erin Muths; B R Noon; P. Stephen Corn
Date: 2005 | Outlet: Ecological Applications 15: 2150–2160
Two populations of boreal toads (Bufo boreas) experienced drastic declines in abundance in the late-1990s. Evidence supported the hypothesis of disease (the chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) as the cause of these declines, but other hypotheses had not been evaluated. We used an 11- year capture-recapture data set to evaluate weather and disease as causes of these declines. We developed sets of mathematical models that reflected hypothesized relationships between several weather variables and annual survival rates of adult males in these populations. In addition, models that reflected the possibility that the declines were caused by an introduced fungus were developed. All models were fit to the data and evaluated using a model selection criterion (QAICc). Our analysis provided strong support for the hypothesis of an introduced fungus and little support for the hypothesis that weather conditions caused the declines. Our results also suggest a strong, negative ‘marking effect’ on survival rates of boreal toads. Model-averaged estimates of survival rate are presented.
Papers & Reports The effects of weather on survival in populations of boreal toads in Colorado
Authors: R D Scherer; Erin Muths; Brad A Lambert
Date: 2008 | Outlet: Journal of Herpetology 42: 508–517
Understanding the relationships between animal population demography and the abiotic and biotic elements of the environments in which they live is a central objective in population ecology. For example, correlations between weather variables and the probability of survival in populations of temperate zone amphibians may be broadly applicable to several species if such correlations can be validated for multiple situations. This study focuses on the probability of survival and evaluates hypotheses based on 6 weather variables in 3 populations of Boreal Toads (Bufo boreas) from central Colorado over 8 years. In addition to suggesting a relationship between some weather variables and survival probability in Boreal Toad populations, this study uses robust methods and highlights the need for demographic estimates that are precise and have minimal bias. Capture-recapture methods were used to collect the data, and the Cormack-Jolly-Seber model in program MARK was used for analysis. The top models included minimum daily winter air temperature and the sum of the model weights for these models was https://0.956. Weaker support was found for the importance of snow depth and the amount of environmental moisture in winter in modeling survival probability. Minimum daily winter air temperature was positively correlated with the probability of survival in Boreal Toads at other sites in Colorado and has been identified as an important covariate in studies in other parts of the world. If air temperatures are an important component of survival for Boreal Toads or other amphibians, changes in climate may have profound impacts on populations.
Papers & Reports Detection of wood frog egg masses and implications for amphibian monitoring programs
Authors: R D Scherer
Date: 2008 | Outlet: Copeia 2008: 669–672
Papers & Reports Occurrence of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis in amphibian populations in Denmark
Authors: R Scalera; Michael J Adams; Stephanie K Galvan
Date: 2008 | Outlet: Herpetological Review 39: 199-200
In summer 2007, we hand captured individual amphibians in Denmark and sampled them for B. dendrobatidis. We found B. dendrobatidis on individuals from both species sampled and at 2 of the 4 study areas we examined. One of the positive results was for an adult of Rana kl. esculenta captured in Vestamager. The other positive result was for a juvenile of Rana temporaria captured in Egense.
Papers & Reports Estimating abundance from repeated presence-absence data or point counts
Authors: J A Royle; J D Nichols
Date: 2003 | Outlet: Ecology 84: 777-790