Urban development is known to alter the structure, chemistry, and biota associated with stream systems; however, little is known about the dynamics of anurans that breed in and around streams. We used automated devices to record breeding anurans for one year across a forested gradient in an effort to identify species-specific sensitivities to urbanization. Six of 13 total species found during the study were present in surveyed streams that were representative of a gradient ranging from heavily urbanized to largely forested, and maximum species richness occurred in watersheds with rapid urban development but low values of impervious surfaces such as pavement and roof tops. The best landscape-scale predictor of assemblage metrics such as species richness, total species activity, and species diversity was generally percent forest cover at the watershed scale (or in very large buffers around the sample point). We used Bayesian inference to estimate detection probability and occupancy for 11 species. While detection probability varied across sampling occasions, there was no evidence that occupancy was a function of forest loss for any species. Urban streams and riparian areas are often severely altered when compared to similar habitats in forested areas. Anuran richness and diversity from urban areas was not altered to the same extent as caudates, which have been sampled from these same streams in previous studies. Increased vagility of anurans, coupled with different breeding strategies, may help to explain this discrepancy.
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June 28 2016
Stream and Riparian Habitat Use by Anurans along a Forested Gradient in Western Georgia, USA
Kyle Barrett;
Kyle Barrett
1Department of Biological Sciences, 331 Funchess Hall, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama 36849.
2Present address: Department of Forestry and Environmental Conservation, 261 Lehotsky Hall, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina 29634; Email: (KB) rbarre2@clemson.edu. Send reprint requests to KB.
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Craig Guyer;
Craig Guyer
1Department of Biological Sciences, 331 Funchess Hall, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama 36849.
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Stephen T. Samoray;
Stephen T. Samoray
1Department of Biological Sciences, 331 Funchess Hall, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama 36849.
3Present address: Copperhead Consulting, Inc., 11641 Richmond Road, Paint Lick, Kentucky 40461.
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Yoichiro Kanno
Yoichiro Kanno
2Present address: Department of Forestry and Environmental Conservation, 261 Lehotsky Hall, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina 29634; Email: (KB) rbarre2@clemson.edu. Send reprint requests to KB.
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Copeia (2016) 104 (2): 570–576.
Citation
Kyle Barrett, Craig Guyer, Stephen T. Samoray, Yoichiro Kanno; Stream and Riparian Habitat Use by Anurans along a Forested Gradient in Western Georgia, USA. Copeia 1 July 2016; 104 (2): 570–576. doi: https://doi.org/10.1643/CE-15-318
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