Monday 28 January 2013

Rapid Increases and Time-Lagged Declines in Amphibian Occupancy after Wildfire – via Herp Digest


Conservation Biology
Volume 27, Issue 1, pages 219–228, February 2013
BLAKE R. HOSSACK1,2,
WINSOR H. LOWE3,
PAUL STEPHEN CORN1


Author Information
1U.S. Geological Survey, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute, Missoula, U.S.A.
2Wildlife Biology Program, University of Montana, Missoula, U.S.A.
3Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, U.S.A.

Email: PAUL STEPHEN CORN (blake_hossack@usgs.gov)
Article first published online: 14 SEP 2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2012.01921.x

Abstract
Climate change is expected to increase the frequency and severity of drought and wildfire. Aquatic and moisture-sensitive species, such as amphibians, may be particularly vulnerable to these modified disturbance regimes because large wildfires often occur during extended droughts and thus may compound environmental threats. However, understanding of the effects of wildfires on amphibians in forests with long fire-return intervals is limited. Numerous stand-replacing wildfires have occurred since 1988 in Glacier National Park (Montana, U.S.A.), where we have conducted long-term monitoring of amphibians. We measured responses of 3 amphibian species to fires of different sizes, severity, and age in a small geographic area with uniform management. We used data from wetlands associated with 6 wildfires that burned between 1988 and 2003 to evaluate whether burn extent and severity and interactions between wildfire and wetland isolation affected the distribution of breeding populations. We measured responses with models that accounted for imperfect detection to estimate occupancy during prefire (0–4 years) and different postfire recovery periods. For the long-toed salamander (Ambystoma macrodactylum) and Columbia spotted frog (Rana luteiventris), occupancy was not affected for 6 years after wildfire. But 7–21 years after wildfire, occupancy for both species decreased ≥25% in areas where >50% of the forest within 500 m of wetlands burned. In contrast, occupancy of the boreal toad (Anaxyrus boreas) tripled in the 3 years after low-elevation forests burned. This increase in occupancy was followed by a gradual decline. Our results show that accounting for magnitude of change and time lags is critical to understanding population dynamics of amphibians after large disturbances. Our results also inform understanding of the potential threat of increases in wildfire frequency or severity to amphibians in the region

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