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Effects of fine‐scale forest habitat quality on movement and settling decisions in juvenile pond‐breeding salamanders
A better understanding of how individuals respond to variation in habitat quality while moving through heterogeneous habitats is needed to predict ecological phenomena at larger scales, such as local population and metapopulation dynamics. We sought to identify how fine‐scale habitat quality affects the decisions of juvenile pond‐breeding salamanders (Ambystoma maculatumandA. annulatum) to cease dispersive movements away from their natal pond, select a refuge, and settle. Because of the acute susceptibility of juvenile amphibians to evaporative water loss in terrestrial habitats, we predicted that they possess mechanisms for adjusting their behavior in response to variations in fine‐scale habitat quality. We used experimental field enclosures to isolate the effects of habitat quality on settling behavior and employed generalized linear mixed models to examine how manipulations in canopy cover (closed or open) and microhabitat (control, compacted soils, high coarse woody debris, high burrow density), along with environmental variables (rainfall and air temperature), affect the individual's probability of settling. Our results indicated thatA. maculatumandA. annulatumhad a 10% and 30% decreased probability of settling in open‐canopy clearcut habitat, respectively, compared to closed‐canopy forest habitat. In addition,A. annulatumwere 24% less likely to settle in compacted soil treatments. Although the settlement probability ofA. annulatumdid not depend on refuge availability,A. maculatumwere 18% and 25% more likely to settle under conditions of high burrow density and high coarse woody debris, respectively. These findings make a unique contribution to our understanding of amphibian movement ecology by demonstrating how the interplay of external factors and individual behavior produce observed patterns of movement and habitat selection.
Effects of fine‐scale forest habitat quality on movement and settling decisions in juvenile pond‐breeding salamanders
A better understanding of how individuals respond to variation in habitat quality while moving through heterogeneous habitats is needed to predict ecological phenomena at larger scales, such as local population and metapopulation dynamics. We sought to identify how fine‐scale habitat quality affects the decisions of juvenile pond‐breeding salamanders (Ambystoma maculatumandA. annulatum) to cease dispersive movements away from their natal pond, select a refuge, and settle. Because of the acute susceptibility of juvenile amphibians to evaporative water loss in terrestrial habitats, we predicted that they possess mechanisms for adjusting their behavior in response to variations in fine‐scale habitat quality. We used experimental field enclosures to isolate the effects of habitat quality on settling behavior and employed generalized linear mixed models to examine how manipulations in canopy cover (closed or open) and microhabitat (control, compacted soils, high coarse woody debris, high burrow density), along with environmental variables (rainfall and air temperature), affect the individual's probability of settling. Our results indicated thatA. maculatumandA. annulatumhad a 10% and 30% decreased probability of settling in open‐canopy clearcut habitat, respectively, compared to closed‐canopy forest habitat. In addition,A. annulatumwere 24% less likely to settle in compacted soil treatments. Although the settlement probability ofA. annulatumdid not depend on refuge availability,A. maculatumwere 18% and 25% more likely to settle under conditions of high burrow density and high coarse woody debris, respectively. These findings make a unique contribution to our understanding of amphibian movement ecology by demonstrating how the interplay of external factors and individual behavior produce observed patterns of movement and habitat selection.
Effects of fine‐scale forest habitat quality on movement and settling decisions in juvenile pond‐breeding salamanders
Ecological Applications
Osbourn, Michael S. (Autor:in) / Connette, Grant M. (Autor:in) / Semlitsch, Raymond D. (Autor:in)
Ecological Applications ; 24 ; 1719-1729
01.10.2014
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch