Identifying drivers of population dynamics for a stream breeding amphibian using time series of egg mass counts

Author:

Rose Jonathan P.1ORCID,Kupferberg Sarah J.2ORCID,Peek Ryan A.34ORCID,Ashton Don5,Bettaso James B.6,Bobzien Steve7,Bourque Ryan M.89,Breedveld Koen G. H.10,Catenazzi Alessandro11ORCID,Drennan Joseph E.12,Gonsolin Earl13,Grefsrud Marcia14,Herman Andrea E.15ORCID,House Matthew R.9,Kluber Matt R.9,Lind Amy J.16,Marlow Karla R.12,Striegle Alan17,van Hattem Michael8,Wheeler Clara A.18ORCID,Wilcox Jeffery T.19ORCID,Wiseman Kevin D.20,Halstead Brian J.21ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, Santa Cruz Field Station Santa Cruz California USA

2. Independent Scholar and Consulting Ecologist Berkeley California USA

3. Center for Watershed Sciences University of California Davis California USA

4. California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Wildlife Program Sacramento California USA

5. McBain Associates Applied River Sciences Arcata California USA

6. USDA Forest Service, Six Rivers National Forest Willow Creek California USA

7. East Bay Regional Park District, Stewardship Department Oakland California USA

8. California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Habitat Conservation Program, Northern Region Eureka California USA

9. Green Diamond Resource Company Korbel California USA

10. Spring Rivers Ecological Sciences LLC Cassel California USA

11. Department of Biological Sciences Florida International University Miami Florida USA

12. Garcia and Associates (GANDA) San Francisco California USA

13. Alluvion Biological Consulting LLC San Jose California USA

14. Bay Delta Region, Habitat Conservation, California Department of Fish and Wildlife Fairfield California USA

15. Pacific Gas and Electric Company Oakland California USA

16. USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Region Nevada City California USA

17. Natural Resources and Lands Management Division San Francisco Public Utilities Commission Sunol California USA

18. USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station Arcata California USA

19. Sonoma Mountain Ranch Preservation Foundation Petaluma California USA

20. Department of Herpetology California Academy of Sciences San Francisco California USA

21. U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, Dixon Field Station Dixon California USA

Abstract

AbstractThe decline in amphibian populations is one of the starkest examples of the biodiversity crisis. For stream breeding amphibians, alterations to natural flow regimes by dams, water diversions, and climate change have been implicated in declines and extirpations. Identifying drivers of amphibian declines requires long time series of abundance data because amphibian populations can exhibit high natural variability. Multiple population viability analysis (MPVA) models integrate abundance data and share information from different populations to estimate how environmental factors influence population growth. Flow alteration has been linked to declines and extirpations in the Foothill Yellow‐legged Frog (Rana boylii), a stream breeding amphibian native to California and Oregon. To date, no study has jointly analyzed abundance data from populations throughout the range of R. boylii in an MPVA model. We compiled time series of egg mass counts (an index of adult female abundance) from R. boylii populations in 36 focal streams and fit an MPVA model to quantify how streamflow metrics, stream temperature, and surrounding land cover affect population growth. We found population growth was positively related to stream temperature and was higher in the years following a wet year with high total annual streamflow. Density dependence was weakest (i.e., carrying capacity was highest) for streams with high seasonality of streamflow and intermediate rates of change in streamflow during spring. Our results highlight how altered streamflow can further increase the risk of decline for R. boylii populations. Managing stream conditions to better match natural flow and thermal regimes would benefit the conservation of R. boylii populations.

Funder

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

U.S. Geological Survey

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference114 articles.

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