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Distribution Patterns of Lentic-Breeding Amphibians in Relation to Ultraviolet Radiation Exposure in Western North America
Authors:Michael J. Adams  Blake R. Hossack  Roland A. Knapp  Paul Stephen Corn  Stephen A. Diamond  Peter C. Trenham  Dan B. Fagre
Affiliation:(1) US Geological Survey, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, 3200 S.W. Jefferson Way, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA;(2) US Geological Survey, Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, 790 E. Beckwith Ave, Missoula, Montana 59801, USA;(3) Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory, University of California, HCR 79, 198, Crowley Lake, California 93546, USA;(4) Mid-Continent Ecology Division, US Environmental Protection Agency, 6201 Congdon Blvd, Duluth, Minnesota 55804, USA;(5) US Geological Survey, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, Glacier Field Station, West Glacier, Montana 59936, USA
Abstract:An increase in ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation has been posited to be a potential factor in the decline of some amphibian population. This hypothesis has received support from laboratory and field experiments showing that current levels of UV-B can cause embryo mortality in some species, but little research has addressed whether UV-B is influencing the distribution of amphibian populations. We compared patterns of amphibian presence to site-specific estimates of UV-B dose at 683 ponds and lakes in Glacier, Olympic, and Sequoia–Kings Canyon National Parks. All three parks are located in western North America, a region with a concentration of documented amphibian declines. Site-specific daily UV-B dose was estimated using modeled and field-collected data to incorporate the effects of elevation, landscape, and water-column dissolved organic carbon. Of the eight species we examined (Ambystoma gracile, Ambystoma macrodactylum, Bufo boreas, Pseudacris regilla, Rana cascadae, Rana leuteiventris, Rana muscosa, Taricha granulosa), two species (T. granulosa and A. macrodactylum) had quadratic relationships with UV-B that could have resulted from negative UV-B effects. Both species were most likely to occur at moderate UV-B levels. Ambystoma macrodactylum showed this pattern only in Glacier National Park. Occurrence of A. macrodactylum increased as UV-B increased in Olympic National Park despite UV-B levels similar to those recorded in Glacier. We also found marginal support for a negative association with UV-B for P. regilla in one of the two parks where it occurred. We did not find evidence of a negative UV-B effect for any other species. Much more work is still needed to determine whether UV-B, either alone or in concert with other factors, is causing widespread population losses in amphibians.
Keywords:amphibian decline  ultraviolet-B radiation  global change  mountain ponds  national parks.
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