Effects of an Invasive Plant on Population Dynamics in Toads |
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Authors: | DANIEL A. GREENBERG DAVID M. GREEN |
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Affiliation: | Redpath Museum, McGill University, , Quebec H3A 0C4, Canada |
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Abstract: | When populations decline in response to unfavorable environmental change, the dynamics of their population growth shift. In populations that normally exhibit high levels of variation in recruitment and abundance, as do many amphibians, declines may be difficult to identify from natural fluctuations in abundance. However, the onset of declines may be evident from changes in population growth rate in sufficiently long time series of population data. With data from 23 years of study of a population of Fowler's toad (Anaxyrus [ = Bufo] fowleri) at Long Point, Ontario (1989–2011), we sought to identify such a shift in dynamics. We tested for trends in abundance to detect a change point in population dynamics and then tested among competing population models to identify associated intrinsic and extrinsic factors. The most informative models of population growth included terms for toad abundance and the extent of an invasive marsh plant, the common reed (Phragmites australis), throughout the toads’ marshland breeding areas. Our results showed density‐dependent growth in the toad population from 1989 through 2002. After 2002, however, we found progressive population decline in the toads associated with the spread of common reeds and consequent loss of toad breeding habitat. This resulted in reduced recruitment and population growth despite the lack of significant loss of adult habitat. Our results underscore the value of using long‐term time series to identify shifts in population dynamics coincident with the advent of population decline. Efectos de una Planta Invasora sobre las Dinámica Poblacional de Sapos |
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Keywords: | amphibian declines Anaxyrus fowleri habitat loss invasive species Phragmites australis population regulation time series Anaxyrus fowleri declinaciones de anfibios especies invasoras pé rdida de há bitat Phragmites australis regulació n de la població n series de tiempo |
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