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Enigmatic
Decline of a Protected Population of Eastern Kingsnakes, Lampropeltis
getula, in South Carolina
Christopher
T. Winne, John D. Willson, Brian D. Todd, Kimberly M. Andrews, and
J. Whitfield Gibbons
Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, The University of Georgia, Aiken, SC
29802, USA
Abstract
Although recent reports of global amphibian declines have received considerable
attention, reptile declines have gone largely unreported. Among reptiles,
snakes are particularly difficult to quantitatively sample, and thus,
most reports of snake declines are based on qualitative or anecdotal evidence.
Recently, several sources have suggested that Eastern Kingsnakes (Lampropeltis
getula) have declined over a substantial
portion of their range in the southeastern United States, particularly
in Florida. However, published evidence for L. getula declines
or their potential causes are limited. We monitored the status of a population
of L. getula on the U.S. Department of Energys Savannah River
Site (SRS) in Aiken, South Carolina, USA, from 1975 to 2006. Herpetofaunal
populations on the Savannah River Site have been protected from the pressures
of collecting and development since 1951 due to site access restrictions.
Here, we document a decline in both abundance and body condition of L.
getula inhabiting the vicinity of a large isolated wetland over the
past three decades. Because this L. getula population was protected
from anthropogenic habitat degradation, collection, and road mortality,
we are able to exclude these factors as possible causes of the documented
decline. Although the definitive cause of the decline remains enigmatic,
natural succession of the surrounding uplands, periodic extreme droughts,
shifts in community composition (e.g., increased Agkistrodon piscivorus
abundance),introduced fire ants, or disease are all potential contributors
to the decline.
SREL Reprint #3048
Winne, C. T., J. D. Willson, B. D. Todd, K. M. Andrews, and J. W. Gibbons
2007. Enigmatic Decline of a Protected Population of Eastern Kingsnakes,
Lampropeltis getula, in South Carolina. Copeia 2007(3):507-519.
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