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Demographic effects of phenological variation in natural populations of two pond-breeding salamanders

  • Population ecology – original research
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Abstract

Phenology is a key driver of population and community dynamics. Phenological metrics (e.g., first date that an event occurred) often simplify information from the full phenological distribution, which may undermine efforts to determine the importance of life history events. Data regarding full phenological distributions are especially needed as many species are shifting phenology with climatic change which can alter life-history patterns and species dynamics. We tested whether skewness, kurtosis or maximum duration of breeding phenology affected juvenile emigration phenology and survival in natural populations of ringed (Ambystoma annulatum) and spotted salamanders (A. maculatum) spanning a 7-year period at two study locations. We evaluated the relative importance of different phenological metrics in breeding phenology and larval density dependence on emigration phenology and survival. We found that variability in emigration phenology differed by species, with ringed salamanders having a shorter duration and distributions that were more often right-skewed and leptokurtic compared to spotted salamanders. Emigration phenology was not linked to any measure of variability in breeding phenology, indicating phenological variability operates independently across life stages and may be subject to stage-specific influences. Emigration duration and skewness were partially explained by larval density, which demonstrates how phenological distributions may change with species interactions. Further tests that use the full phenological distribution to link variability in timing of life history events to demographic traits such as survival are needed to determine if and how phenological shifts will impact species persistence.

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Acknowledgements

We thank R. Semlitsch for guidance during these projects, the many students, volunteers, and technicians who helped monitor drift fences, especially K. Aldeman, T. Altnether, S. Altnether, S. Crouch, M. Doyle, C. R. Mank, J. Deters, N. Mills, B. Williams, S. James, G. Johnson, D. Johnson, B. Maltais, C. Rittenhouse, D. Patrick, S. Spears, Z. Slinker, B. Rothermel, C. E. Harper, C. Conner, K. Malone, J. Bardwell, B. Scheffers, E. Wengert, J. Sias, and L. Rehard. We thank J. Briggler and G. Raeker of the Missouri Department of Conservation the University of Missouri Division of Biological Sciences, and J. Millspaugh and the University of Missouri Department of Fisheries and Wildlife for support and access to the Baskett sites. This project was supported by U. S. Geological Survey 01CRAG0007, NSF DEB 0239943, and SERDP RC-2703, and conducted under MU-ACUC 3368.

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TLA designed the study and wrote the manuscript; TLA and DJH analyzed the data; TAGR, JEE, DJH, MSO, and JRJ collected the data and substantially edited the manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Thomas L. Anderson.

Additional information

Communicated by David Chalcraft.

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Anderson, T.L., Earl, J.E., Hocking, D.J. et al. Demographic effects of phenological variation in natural populations of two pond-breeding salamanders. Oecologia 196, 1073–1083 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-021-05000-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-021-05000-y

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