Building pondscapes for amphibian metapopulations

Author:

Moor Helen12ORCID,Bergamini Ariel1ORCID,Vorburger Christoph23ORCID,Holderegger Rolf13ORCID,Bühler Christoph4,Bircher Nicolas5,Schmidt Benedikt R.67ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL Birmensdorf Switzerland

2. Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology Eawag Dübendorf Switzerland

3. Department of Environmental Systems Science ETH Zurich Zurich Switzerland

4. Hintermann & Weber AG Reinach Switzerland

5. Sektion Natur and Landschaft Kanton Aargau Aarau Switzerland

6. info fauna karch Neuchâtel Switzerland

7. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies University of Zurich Zürich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractThe success of ponds constructed to restore ecological infrastructure for pond‐breeding amphibians and benefit aquatic biodiversity depends on where and how they are built. We studied effects of pond and landscape characteristics, including connectivity, on metapopulation dynamics of 12 amphibian species in Switzerland. To understand the determinants of long‐term occupancy (here summarized as incidence), environmental effects on both colonization and persistence should be considered. We fitted dynamic occupancy models to 20 years of monitoring data on a pond construction program to quantify effects of pond and landscape characteristics and different connectivity metrics on colonization and persistence probabilities in constructed ponds. Connectivity to existing populations explained dynamics better than structural connectivity metrics, and simple metrics (distance to the nearest neighbor population, population density) were useful surrogates for dispersal kernel‐weighted metrics commonly used in metapopulation theory. Population connectivity mediated the persistence of conservation target species in new ponds, suggesting source–sink dynamics in newly established populations. Population density captured this effect well and could be used by practitioners for site selection. Ponds created where there were 2–4 occupied ponds within a radius of ∼0.5 km had >3.5 times higher incidence of target species (median) than isolated ponds. Species had individual preferences regarding pond characteristics, but breeding sites with larger (≥100 m2) total water surface area, that temporarily dried, and that were in surroundings with maximally 50% forest benefitted multiple target species. Pond diversity will foster amphibian diversity at the landscape scale.

Funder

Board of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology

Publisher

Wiley

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