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Mountaintop removal mining alters stream salamander population dynamics
Authors:Steven J Price  Sara Beth Freytag  Simon J Bonner  Andrea N Drayer  Brenee' L Muncy  Jacob M Hutton  Christopher D Barton
Institution:1. Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA;2. Department of Statistical and Actuarial Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada;3. Department of Biology, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
Abstract:

Aim

Population dynamics are often tightly linked to the condition of the landscape. Focusing on a landscape impacted by mountaintop removal coal mining (MTR), we ask the following questions: (1) How does MTR influence vital rates including occupancy, colonization and persistence probabilities, and conditional abundance of stream salamander species and life stages? (2) Do species and life stages respond similar to MTR mining or is there significant variation among species and life stages?

Location

Freshwater and terrestrial habitats in Central Appalachia (South‐eastern Kentucky, USA).

Methods

We conducted salamander counts for three consecutive years in 23 headwater stream reaches in forested or previously mined landscapes. We used a hierarchical, N‐mixture model with dynamic occupancy to calculate species‐ and life stage‐specific occupancy, colonization and persistence rates, and abundance given occupancy. We examined the coefficients of the hierarchical priors to determine population variation among species and life stages.

Results

Over 3 years, reference sites had greater salamander abundances and were occupied at a much higher rate than streams impacted by MTR. At sites impacted by MTR mining, most salamander species and life stages exhibited reduced initial occupancy, colonization rates, persistence rates and conditional abundance relative to reference stream reaches. Furthermore, the rates in MTR sites showed low variance, reinforcing that species and life stages were responding similar to MTR.

Main conclusions

Salamander populations in landscapes modified by MTR mining exhibited significantly reduced vital rates compared to reference sites. Yet, similarity in responses across species suggests that management or restoration may benefit the entire salamander assemblage. For example, reforestation could reduce landscape resistance, repair altered hydrologic regimes and allow for higher rates of colonization and persistence in streams impacted by MTR.
Keywords:abundance  Appalachia  coal mining  colonization  persistence  valley fill
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