Historical museum collections and contemporary population studies implicate roads and introduced predatory bullfrogs in the decline of western pond turtles

Author:

Nicholson E. Griffin1,Manzo Stephanie1,Devereux Zachary1,Morgan Thomas Paul1,Fisher Robert N.2ORCID,Brown Christopher2ORCID,Dagit Rosi3,Scott Peter A.4,Shaffer H. Bradley45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, San Diego, CA, USA

3. Resource Conservation District of the Santa Monica Mountains, Topanga, CA, USA

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

5. La Kretz Center for California Conservation Science, Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Abstract

The western pond turtle (WPT), recently separated into two paripatrically distributed species (Emys pallida and Emys marmorata), is experiencing significant reductions in its range and population size. In addition to habitat loss, two potential causes of decline are female-biased road mortality and high juvenile mortality from non-native predatory bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana). However, quantitative analyses of these threats have never been conducted for either species of WPT. We used a combination of historical museum samples and published and unpublished field studies shared with us through personal communications with WPT field researchers (B. Shaffer, P. Scott, R. Fisher, C. Brown, R. Dagit, L. Patterson, T. Engstrom, 2019, personal communications) to quantify the effect of roads and bullfrogs on WPT populations along the west coast of the United States. Both species of WPT shift toward increasingly male biased museum collections over the last century, a trend consistent with increasing, female-biased road mortality. Recent WPT population studies revealed that road density and proximity were significantly associated with increasingly male-biased sex ratios, further suggesting female-biased road mortality. The mean body size of museum collections of E. marmorata, but not E. pallida, has increased over the last 100 years, consistent with reduced recruitment and aging populations that could be driven by invasive predators. Contemporary WPT population sites that co-occur with bullfrogs had significantly greater average body sizes than population sites without bullfrogs, suggesting strong bullfrog predation on small WPT hatchlings and juveniles. Overall, our findings indicate that both species of WPT face demographic challenges which would have been difficult to document without the use of both historical data from natural history collections and contemporary demographic field data. Although correlational, our analyses suggest that female-biased road mortality and predation on small turtles by non-native bullfrogs are occurring, and that conservation strategies reducing both may be important for WPT recovery.

Funder

UCLA Institute of Environment and Sustainability

UCLA La Kretz Center for California Conservation Science

Madelyn and Bruce Glickfeld Award

UCLA Center for the Advancement of Teaching

UCLA

San Diego Association of Governments

USGS

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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