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Salamander Abundance along Road Edges and within Abandoned Logging Roads in Appalachian Forests
Authors:RAYMOND D SEMLITSCH  TRAVIS J RYAN†  KEVIN HAMED‡  MATT CHATFIELD§  BETHANY DREHMAN  NICOLE PEKAREK††  MIKE SPATH‡‡  ANGIE WATLAND§§
Institution:Division of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, U.S.A., email;Department of Biological Sciences, Butler University, Indianapolis, IN 46208, U.S.A.;Virginia Highlands Community College, P.O. Box 828, Abingdon, VA 24212, U.S.A.;University of Michigan, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Museum of Zoology, 2019 Natural Sciences Building, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-10485, U.S.A.;39 Sleigh Rd. Chelmsford, MA 01824, U.S.A.;Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College, 340 Victoria Road, Asheville, NC 28801, U.S.A.;Highlands Biological Station, P.O. Box 580, Highlands, NC 28741, U.S.A.;Clinch Valley Program, The Nature Conservancy, 146, East Main Street, Abingdon, VA 24210, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract:  Roads may be one of the most common disturbances in otherwise continuous forested habitat in the southern Appalachian Mountains. Despite their obvious presence on the landscape, there is limited data on the ecological effects along a road edge or the size of the "road-effect zone." We sampled salamanders at current and abandoned road sites within the Nantahala National Forest, North Carolina (U.S.A.) to determine the road-effect zone for an assemblage of woodland salamanders. Salamander abundance near the road was reduced significantly, and salamanders along the edges were predominantly large individuals. These results indicate that the road-effect zone for these salamanders extended 35 m on either side of the relatively narrow, low-use forest roads along which we sampled. Furthermore, salamander abundance was significantly lower on old, abandoned logging roads compared with the adjacent upslope sites. These results indicate that forest roads and abandoned logging roads have negative effects on forest-dependent species such as plethodontid salamanders. Our results may apply to other protected forests in the southern Appalachians and may exemplify a problem created by current and past land use activities in all forested regions, especially those related to road building for natural-resource extraction. Our results show that the effect of roads reached well beyond their boundary and that abandonment or the decommissioning of roads did not reverse detrimental ecological effects; rather, our results indicate that management decisions have significant repercussions for generations to come. Furthermore, the quantity of suitable forested habitat in the protected areas we studied was significantly reduced: between 28.6% and 36.9% of the area was affected by roads. Management and policy decisions must use current and historical data on land use to understand cumulative impacts on forest-dependent species and to fully protect biodiversity on national lands
Keywords:amphibian  edge effects  land use  logging              Plethodon            road-effect zone
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