Title
The importance of thermal conditions to recruitment success in stream-breeding frog populations distributed across a productivity gradient
Date Issued
01 December 2013
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Southern Illinois University
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
Predicting the vulnerability of species to environmental change requires integrating observations of individual ecophysiological and behavioral responses with community level constraints. To assess the response of stream-breeding frogs (Rana boylii) to thermal stressors, such as cold water released from the depths of upstream reservoirs or warm water that results from climate change, we combined field manipulations with population censuses and environmental correlations. These frogs migrate between shaded tributaries and open canopy mainstem channels to oviposit where algal food is abundant for tadpoles. Within this context of spatial variation in aquatic primary productivity, we evaluated whether tadpole thermoregulatory behavior is a useful indicator of survival to metamorphosis and adult distribution. In a thermal gradient, tadpoles selected temperatures between 16.5-22.2. °C (mean, 19.60. ±. 0.6. °C). We reared tadpoles in streams colder, warmer, or close to thermal preference. Temperature effects were mediated through algal quantity and quality. Mortality increased with increasing deviation from preferred temperatures, but the effects were ameliorated when tadpole diet was supplemented with algae (Cladophora glomerata with epiphytic nitrogen-rich diatoms, Epithemia spp.) harvested from sun-lit channels. Distribution of frogs in free-flowing and dammed reaches within a northern California watershed was in equilibrium with tadpole thermal preference. Populations were dense (≥125 breeding females/km) where July water temperatures averaged 17.5-19. °C in 2010, a relatively cool summer. Below 16. °C, frogs were sparse with open canopy and absent under closed canopy. Integration of thermoregulatory behavior with ecological context can thus be useful to forecast recruitment when the thermal regimes of rivers are altered by anthropogenic factors. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd.
Start page
40
End page
48
Volume
168
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ecología Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84885726574
Source
Biological Conservation
ISSN of the container
00063207
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by the California Energy Commission (Award # 500-08-031 ). We thank the University of California Natural Reserve System for maintaining the Angelo Coast Range Reserve as a protected site for basic research; the National Center for Earth-System Dynamics, M. Power, P. Steel, and C. Bode for supporting the Preserve’s environmental monitoring program; C. Bode for producing Fig. 1 ; S. Becerra-Muñoz, R. Hulme, R. Peek, B. Steel, and E. Steel for field assistance. AC was supported by a fellowship from the Swiss National Science Foundation (# 116305 ) and the Gompertz Endowed Chair of M. Power.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus