[PDF][PDF] Salamander occupancy in headwater stream networks

EHC Grant, LE Green, WH Lowe - Freshwater Biology, 2009 - Citeseer
Freshwater Biology, 2009Citeseer
Stream ecosystems exhibit a highly consistent dendritic geometry in which linear habitat
units intersect to create a hierarchical network of connected branches. 2. Ecological and life
history traits of species living in streams, such as the potential for overland movement, may
interact with this architecture to shape patterns of occupancy and response to disturbance.
Specifically, large-scale habitat alteration that fragments stream networks and reduces
connectivity may reduce the probability a stream is occupied by sensitive species, such as …
Summary
1. Stream ecosystems exhibit a highly consistent dendritic geometry in which linear habitat units intersect to create a hierarchical network of connected branches. 2. Ecological and life history traits of species living in streams, such as the potential for overland movement, may interact with this architecture to shape patterns of occupancy and response to disturbance. Specifically, large-scale habitat alteration that fragments stream networks and reduces connectivity may reduce the probability a stream is occupied by sensitive species, such as stream salamanders. 3. We collected habitat occupancy data on four species of stream salamanders in first-order (ie headwater) streams in undeveloped and urbanised regions of the eastern USA We then used an information–theoretic approach to test alternative models of salamander occupancy based on a priori predictions of the effects of network configuration, region and salamander life history.
4. Across all four species, we found that streams connected to other first-order streams had higher occupancy than those flowing directly into larger streams and rivers. For three of the four species, occupancy was lower in the urbanised region than in the undeveloped region.
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