Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5020, USA.
BMC Ecol. 2010 Apr 3;10:10. doi: 10.1186/1472-6785-10-10.
Loss of pond habitat is catastrophic to aquatic larval amphibians, but even reduction in the amount of time a breeding site holds water (hydroperiod) can influence amphibian development and limit reproductive success. Using the landscape variation of a glacial valley in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem as the context for a natural experiment, we examined variation in growth pattern and life history of the salamander Ambystoma tigrinum melanostictum and determined how these developmental characteristics varied with hydroperiod over several summers.
In ponds that dried early in the season, maximum larval size was reduced relative to the sizes achieved in permanent ponds. Ephemeral ponds were associated with early metamorphosis at small body sizes, while permanent ponds facilitated longer larval periods and later metamorphosis. Paedomorphosis resulted from indefinite metamorphic postponement, and was identified only in the most permanent environments. Patterns of growth and allometry were similar between ponds with different hydroperiods, but considerable life history variation was derived from modulating the timing of and size at metamorphosis. Considering maximum rates of growth and inferring the minimum size at metamorphosis across 25 ponds over the course of three years, we calculated that hydroperiods longer than three months are necessary to support these populations through metamorphosis and/or reproductive maturity.
Landscape heterogeneity fosters life history variation in this natural population. Modulation of the complex ambystomatid life cycle allows this species to survive in unpredictable environments, but current trends towards rapid pond drying will promote metamorphosis at smaller sizes and could eliminate the paedomorphic phenotype from this region. Metamorphosis at small size is has been linked to altered fitness traits, including reduced survival and fecundity. Thus, widespread environmental truncation of larval periods may lead to decreased population persistence. We found that the hydroperiods of many ponds in this region are now shorter than the developmental period required for larvae to reach the minimum size for metamorphosis; these locations serve as reproductive sinks that may be detrimental for persistence of the species in the region.
池塘生境的丧失对水生幼体两栖动物来说是灾难性的,但即使繁殖地保持水的时间(水期)减少,也会影响两栖动物的发育并限制繁殖成功。本研究以大黄石生态系统冰川谷的景观变化为自然实验的背景,研究了黄缘蝾螈 Ambystoma tigrinum melanostictum 的生长模式和生活史变化,并确定了这些发育特征在几个夏季如何随水期而变化。
在季节早期干涸的池塘中,与永久性池塘中达到的大小相比,最大幼虫大小减小。短暂的池塘与小型体大小的早期变态有关,而永久性池塘则有利于较长的幼虫期和后期的变态。幼态持续是由于不定时的变态推迟而产生的,仅在最持久的环境中才能识别。不同水期池塘的生长和比例模式相似,但相当大的生活史变化来自于调节变态的时间和大小。考虑到生长的最大速率,并在三年内通过 25 个池塘推断出最小的变态大小,我们计算出,水期超过三个月才能使这些种群通过变态和/或生殖成熟。
景观异质性促进了这个自然种群的生活史变化。调节复杂的蝾螈生命周期允许该物种在不可预测的环境中生存,但目前池塘快速干涸的趋势将促进较小体型的变态,并可能使该地区失去幼态表型。小体型的变态与改变的适合度特征有关,包括降低存活率和繁殖力。因此,广泛的环境缩短幼虫期可能导致种群持久性降低。我们发现,该地区许多池塘的水期现在短于幼虫达到最小变态大小所需的发育时间;这些位置是繁殖汇,可能对该地区物种的持久性有害。