Environmental variables associated with the distribution and occupancy of habitat specialist tadpoles in naturally acidic, oligotrophic waterbodies

被引:14
作者
Simpkins, Clay Alan [1 ]
Shuker, Jonathan D. [1 ]
Lollback, Gregory W. [1 ]
Castley, J. Guy [2 ]
Hero, Jean-Marc [1 ]
机构
[1] Griffith Univ, Environm Futures Ctr, Sch Environm, Gold Coast, Qld 4222, Australia
[2] Griffith Univ, Int Ctr Ecotourism Res, Sch Environm, Gold Coast, Qld 4222, Australia
关键词
acid frog; acidic waterbody; Crinia tinnula; Litoria olongburensis; tadpole; tadpole assemblage; wallum; AMPHIBIAN LARVAE; ANTIPREDATOR DEFENSES; WETLAND HYDROPERIOD; RANA-ARVALIS; TREE FROG; LOW PH; SALINITY; WATER; TOLERANCE; PREDATION;
D O I
10.1111/aec.12048
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Environmental factors play an integral role, either directly or indirectly, in structuring faunal assemblages. Water chemistry, predation, hydroperiod and competition influence tadpole assemblages within waterbodies. We surveyed aquatic predators, habitat refugia, water height and water chemistry variables (pH, salinity and turbidity) at 37 waterbodies over an intensive 22-day field survey to determine which environmental factors influence the relative abundance and occupancy of two habitat specialist anuran tadpole species in naturally acidic, oligotrophic waterbodies within eastern Australian wallum communities. The majority of tadpoles found were of Litoria olongburensis (wallum sedge frog) and Crinia tinnula (wallum froglet) species, both habitat specialists that are associated with wallum waterbodies and listed as Vulnerable under the IUCN Red List. Tadpoles of two other species (Litoria fallax (eastern sedge frog), and Litoria cooloolensis (cooloola sedge frog)) were recorded from two waterbodies. Tadpoles of Litoria gracilenta (graceful treefrog) were recorded from one waterbody. Relative abundance and occupancy of L.olongburensis tadpoles were associated with pH and water depth. Additionally, L.olongburensis tadpole relative abundance was negatively associated with turbidity. Waterbody occupancy by C.tinnula tadpoles was negatively associated with predatory fish and water depth and positively associated with turbidity. Variables associated with relative abundance of C.tinnula tadpoles were inconclusive and further survey work is required to identify these environmental factors. Our results show that the ecology of specialist and non-specialist tadpole species associated with unique' (e.g. wallum) waterbodies is complex and species specific, with specialist species likely dominating unique habitats.
引用
收藏
页码:95 / 105
页数:11
相关论文
共 69 条
[51]   Effects of increased salinity on tadpoles of two anurans from a Caribbean coastal wetland in relation to their natural abundance [J].
Rios-Lopez, Neftali .
AMPHIBIA-REPTILIA, 2008, 29 (01) :7-18
[52]   A MULTILEVEL STUDY OF EFFECTS OF LOW PH ON AMPHIBIANS OF TEMPORARY PONDS [J].
SADINSKI, WJ ;
DUNSON, WA .
JOURNAL OF HERPETOLOGY, 1992, 26 (04) :413-422
[53]   Mechanism of predator-prey detection and behavioral responses in some anuran tadpoles [J].
Saidapur, Srinivas K. ;
Veeranagoudar, Dheeraj K. ;
Hiragond, Ningappa C. ;
Shanbhag, Bhagyashri A. .
CHEMOECOLOGY, 2009, 19 (01) :21-28
[54]   Impacts of cattle on amphibian larvae and the aquatic environment [J].
Schmutzer, A. Chandler ;
Gray, Matthew J. ;
Burton, Elizabeth C. ;
Miller, Debra L. .
FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2008, 53 (12) :2613-2625
[55]   Salinity tolerance of non-native Asian swamp eels (Teleostei: Synbranchidae) in Florida, USA: comparison of three populations and implications for dispersal [J].
Schofield, Pamela J. ;
Nico, Leo G. .
ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES, 2009, 85 (01) :51-59
[56]  
Shuker J. D., 2011, THESIS GRIFFITH U GO
[57]   Associations between anuran tadpoles and salinity in a landscape mosaic of wetlands impacted by secondary salinisation [J].
Smith, Michael J. ;
Schreiber, E. Sabine G. ;
Scroggie, Michael P. ;
Kohout, Michele ;
Ough, Keely ;
Potts, Joanne ;
Lennie, Ruth ;
Turnbull, Derek ;
Jin, Changhao ;
Clancy, Tim .
FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 2007, 52 (01) :75-84
[58]  
Snodgrass JW, 2000, ECOL APPL, V10, P1219, DOI 10.2307/2641028
[59]   Risk of predation affects aggregation size:: a study with tadpoles of Phrynomantis microps (Anura: Microhylidae) [J].
Spieler, M .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2003, 65 :179-184
[60]   Evaluating condition-specific and asymmetric competition in a species-distribution context [J].
Twomey, Evan ;
Morales, Victor ;
Summers, Kyle .
OIKOS, 2008, 117 (08) :1175-1184