Post-emergence survival and dispersal of juvenile Jefferson salamander (Ambystoma jeffersonianum) and their unisexual dependents

Author:

Van Drunen Stephen G.1,Linton Jessica E.2,Bogart James P.1,Norris D. Ryan13

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, N1G 2W1, Canada

2. 2Natural Resource Solutions Inc., Waterloo, ON, N2L 3X2, Canada

3. 3Nature Conservancy of Canada, Toronto, ON, M4P 3J1, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Understanding population demography and dispersal of species at risk is integral for evaluating population viability, identifying causes of decline, and assessing the effectiveness of recovery actions. In pond-breeding amphibians, juvenile survival and dispersal are key components linked to population and metapopulation stability but little is known about this life stage. We use mark-recapture methods to estimate juvenile daily apparent survival, dispersal distance, and initial dispersal orientation during summer and fall dispersal of endangered Ambystoma jeffersonianum and their unisexual dependents (Ambystoma laterale – jeffersonianum). Over four years (2015-2018), 1018 juveniles (612 bisexual, 406 unisexual) were marked and 192 (19%) were recaptured at least once. Total captures varied widely between years, with the highest number of captures (88% of all individuals) occurring in 2017. Cormack-Jolly-Seber estimates of daily apparent survival were low in all years (0.76-0.95) but was higher for unisexuals than bisexuals. The majority of juveniles (71%) did not disperse further than 10-40 m after which movement appeared to cease. While most juveniles remained close to their natal pond, at least 2% of juveniles in 2017 travelled further than 100 m. Dispersal orientation varied by year and there was no difference in either dispersal orientation or distance between bisexual and unisexual individuals. This work is the first to estimate and compare juvenile survival and dispersal of sympatric A. jeffersonianum and A. laterale – jeffersonianum individuals, the results of which help inform population viability assessment and increase our understanding of juvenile dispersal dynamics and habitat use.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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