Wildlife Ecology Laboratory, Department of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Tennessee State University, Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America.
Department of Biology, Lee University, Cleveland, Tennessee, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2023 Apr 20;18(4):e0283377. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0283377. eCollection 2023.
Translocations of freshwater species have become a widespread conservation strategy to mitigate the impacts of habitat fragmentation, yet they are not often rigorously monitored using animal movement data to determine their success. We demonstrate the value of monitoring pre- and post-translocation movements and home-range sizes of a fully-aquatic, benthic stream salamander, the eastern hellbender (Cryptobranchus a. alleganiensis) to determine translocation success. We studied the home range sizes, movements, and habitat use of individuals (n = 27) in two self-sustaining populations (S1 & S2) for one year, and then subsequently collected similar data from a subset of these individuals (n = 17) that were translocated into two nearby streams (T1 & T2) with dam-isolated, declining populations in the Blue Ridge Ecoregion of Tennessee. We collected 1,571 location data points (869 pre-translocation and 715 post-translocation) from four study sites, and evaluated effects of mass, sex, and pre-translocation home range size/sedentariness, as well as habitat covariates on home range size and movements. Hellbender home range sizes increased from pre-translocation estimates at both sites, but response depended primarily on physical characteristics of release sites. Home range and fine-scale movement metrics indicated that hellbenders translocated from S1 to T1 settled in more quickly, had greater site fidelity, and smaller home ranges than hellbenders translocated from S2 to T2. Hellbender movements were influenced by cover rock size and density rather than individual characteristics. Study-long survival rates of translocated hellbenders increased from S1 to T1 (80% to 100%) and decreased from S2 to T2 (76% to 33%). Monitoring pre- and post-translocation movements was a valuable method for evaluating short-term translocation success in a freshwater environment. For future hellbender translocations, managers should prioritize selecting suitable release sites with contiguous boulder-dense areas (1-2 per m2), adequate prey (crayfish) densities (>1/m2), and habitats with low risk of predation.
淡水物种的转移已成为缓解栖息地破碎化影响的广泛保护策略,但它们通常不会通过动物运动数据进行严格监测,以确定其成功与否。我们展示了监测完全水生、底栖溪流蝾螈,东部蝾螈(Cryptobranchus a. alleganiensis)的转移前后运动和栖息地范围大小的价值,以确定转移的成功。我们研究了两个自我维持的种群(S1 和 S2)中的个体(n = 27)的栖息地范围大小、运动和栖息地利用情况,为期一年,然后从这些个体中收集了类似的数据(n = 17),这些个体被转移到田纳西州蓝岭生态区的两个附近溪流(T1 和 T2)中,这些溪流的种群因大坝隔离而减少。我们从四个研究地点收集了 1571 个位置数据点(869 个转移前和 715 个转移后),并评估了质量、性别和转移前栖息地范围大小/久坐性以及栖息地协变量对栖息地范围大小和运动的影响。蝾螈的栖息地范围大小从两个地点的转移前估计值都有所增加,但反应主要取决于释放地点的物理特征。栖息地范围和细尺度运动指标表明,从 S1 转移到 T1 的蝾螈比从 S2 转移到 T2 的蝾螈定居得更快,具有更高的地点忠诚度和更小的栖息地范围。蝾螈的运动受覆盖岩石大小和密度的影响,而不是个体特征。从 S1 转移到 T1 的转移蝾螈的研究期内生存率从 80%增加到 100%,而从 S2 转移到 T2 的生存率从 76%降低到 33%。监测转移前后的运动是评估淡水环境中短期转移成功的一种有价值的方法。对于未来的蝾螈转移,管理者应优先选择具有连续巨石密集区(每平方米 1-2 个)、足够的猎物(小龙虾)密度(每平方米>1 个)和低捕食风险的栖息地的合适释放地点。