Chelgren Nathan D, Rosenberg Daniel K, Heppell Selina S, Gitelman Alix I
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331-3803, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2006 Feb;16(1):250-61. doi: 10.1890/04-0329.
In organisms with complex life cycles, physiological stressors during early life stages may have fitness-level impacts that are delayed into later stages or habitats. We tested the hypothesis that body size and date of metamorphosis, which are highly responsive to aquatic stressors, influence post-metamorphic survival and movement patterns in the terrestrial phase of an ephemeral pond-breeding frog by examining these traits in two populations of northern red-legged frogs (Rana aurora aurora). To increase variation of body size at metamorphosis, we manipulated food availability for 314 of 1045 uniquely marked tadpoles and estimated the probability that frogs survived and emigrated using concentric rings of drift fencing surrounding ponds and Bayesian capture-recapture modeling. The odds of surviving and emigrating from the ponds to the innermost drift fences, approximately 12 m, increased by factors of 2.20 (95% credibility intervals 1.39-4.23) and 2.54 (0.94-4.91) with each millimeter increase in snout-vent length and decreased by factors of 0.91 (0.85-0.96) and 0.89 (0.80-1.00) with each day's delay in metamorphosis for the two ponds. The odds of surviving and moving to the next ring of fencing, 12 m to approximately 40 m from the ponds, increased by a factor of 1.20 (0.45-4.06) with each millimeter increase in size. Our results demonstrated that body size and timing of metamorphosis relate strongly to the performance of newly metamorphosed frogs during their initial transition into terrestrial habitat. Carryover effects of aquatic stressors that reduce size and delay metamorphosis may have population-level impacts that are not expressed until terrestrial stages. Since changes in both aquatic and terrestrial systems are implicated in many amphibian declines, quantifying both immediate and delayed effects of stressors on demographic rates is critical to sound management.
在具有复杂生命周期的生物体中,生命早期阶段的生理应激源可能会对适合度水平产生影响,这种影响会延迟到后期阶段或栖息地。我们通过研究两个北方红腿蛙(Rana aurora aurora)种群的这些特征,检验了以下假设:对水生应激源高度敏感的体型和变态日期,会影响在临时池塘繁殖蛙的陆地阶段变态后的存活和移动模式。为了增加变态时体型的差异,我们对1045只独特标记的蝌蚪中的314只进行了食物供应的操控,并使用围绕池塘的同心漂移围栏和贝叶斯捕获 - 再捕获模型估计青蛙存活和迁移的概率。对于两个池塘,随着吻肛长度每增加一毫米,从池塘存活并迁移到最内侧漂移围栏(约12米)的几率分别增加2.20倍(95%可信区间1.39 - 4.23)和2.54倍(0.94 - 4.91),而随着变态每延迟一天,几率分别降低0.91倍(0.85 - 0.96)和0.89倍(0.80 - 1.00)。随着体型每增加一毫米,存活并迁移到下一圈围栏(距离池塘12米到约40米)的几率增加1.20倍(0.45 - 4.06)。我们的结果表明,体型和变态时间与新变态青蛙在最初过渡到陆地栖息地期间的表现密切相关。减少体型并延迟变态的水生应激源的遗留效应可能会产生种群水平的影响,这种影响直到陆地阶段才会显现。由于水生和陆地系统的变化都与许多两栖动物数量下降有关,量化应激源对种群统计学速率的即时和延迟影响对于合理管理至关重要。