Seasonal differences in climate change explain a lack of multi-decadal shifts in population characteristics of a pond breeding salamander
Persistent URL
Author(s)
Wissinger, Scott A.
Kirk, Mark A.
Galatowitsch, Mark L.
Date Issued
September 6, 2019
Abstract
There is considerable variation among studies that evaluate how amphibian populations respond to global climate change. We used 23 years of annual survey data to test whether changes in climate have caused predictable shifts in the phenology and population characteristics of adult spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) during spring breeding migrations. Although we observed year-to-year correlation between seasonal climate variables and salamander population characteristics, there have not been long-term, directional shifts in phenological or population characteristics. Warm winters consistently resulted in early migration dates, but across the 23-year study, there was no overall shift towards warmer winters and thus no advanced migration timing. Warm summers and low variability in summer temperatures were correlated with large salamander body sizes, yet an overall shift towards increasing body sizes was not observed despite rising summer temperatures during the study. This was likely due to the absence of long-term changes of within-year variation in summer temperatures, which was a stronger determinant of body size than summer temperature alone. Climate-induced shifts in population characteristics were thus not observed for this species as long-term changes in important seasonal climate variables were not observed during the 23-years of the study. Different amphibian populations will likely be more resilient to climate change impacts than others, and the probability of amphibians exhibiting long-term population changes will depend on how seasonal climate change interacts with a species’ life history, phenology, and geographic location. Linking a wide range of seasonal climatic conditions to species or population characteristics should thus improve our ability for explaining idiosyncratic responses of species to climate change.
Journal
PLoS ONE
Department
Environmental Science / Studies
Citation
Kirk MA, Galatowitsch ML, Wissinger SA (2019) Seasonal differences in climate change explain a lack of multi-decadal shifts in population characteristics of a pond breeding salamander. PLoS ONE 14(9): e0222097. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222097
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Version of Article
Published article
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0222097
ISSN
1932-6203
Rights
This work is licensed under a Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License.
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