Barbara
E. Taylor†*, David E. Scott†, and J. Whitfield Gibbons†
†Savannah
River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, Drawer E, Aiken, SC
29802-1030, U.S.A.
Abstract
Wide variation in reproductive success is common among amphibians that
breed in seasonal ponds, but persistence of adults can buffer against
these fluctuations, particularly for long-lived species. We hypothesized
that the frequent episodes of catastrophic failure of the marbled salamander
(Ambystoma opacum) enhance the importance of high terrestrial
survival. At Rainbow Bay in South Carolina reproductive success was
poor (<1 metamorph/breeding female) in nearly half of the 22 years
that the species bred. Complete failure occurred in 6 of 22 years. To
study catastrophic failure, we adapted an age-structured, individual-based
model with density-dependent growth and survival of larvae. The model
was based on extensive data from local field studies and experiments.
With consistently good survival in the pond stages, the simulated population
required survival probabilities in the upland stages (juveniles and
adults) near 0.5/year to persist and near 0.8/year to achieve the increases
observed. Catastrophic failure, occurring randomly with probability
0.5/year, created additional fluctuations in the population, raised
the thresholds of survival required for persistence, and caused extinction
under conditions that were otherwise favorable. The marbled salamander
at Rainbow Bay is not at great risk of extinction because of catastrophic
failure, but the risk increases dramatically if life span is decreased
or frequency of failure is increased. Any reduction in terrestrial survival
will have deleterious consequences by reducing the breeding populations
at equilibrium, even if it does not jeopardize persistence. Our model
provides assessments of risk that can be applied to poorly studied species
with similar life histories, such as the endangered flatwoods salamander
(A. cingulatum).
Keywords:
Ambystoma opacum, catastrophic reproductive failure, extinction,
larval density dependence, pond-breeding salamander, population model,
storage effects, terrestrial survival
*email
btaylor@srel.edu
SREL
Reprint #2957
Taylor,
B. E., D. E. Scott, and J. W. Gibbons. 2006. Catastrophic Reproductive
Failure, Terrestrial Survival, and Persistence of the Marbled Salamander.
Conservation Biology 20(3):792-801.