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| SREL Reprint #3095 | ||||||||||||||||||
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Long-Term
Population Trends of American Alligators (Alligator mississippiensis)
in a Man-Made Reservoir: Responses to Environmental Perturbations Arising
from Management Activities Savannah
River Ecology Laboratory, P.O. Drawer E, Aiken, South Carolina 29802,
USA Abstract:
The expansion of urban and suburban population centers in the southeastern
United States has been accompanied by increases in man-made reservoirs
to meet demands for hydroelectric power, cooling of industrial effluents,
and recreational real estate development. Reservoirs have provided American
Alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) with a relatively new type
of large, open-water habitat one rarely encountered naturally.
Using a long-term series of population studies of Alligators inhabiting
a 993 ha nuclear reactor cooling reservoir in west-central South Carolina
(USA), we assessed temporal trends in Alligator numbers and demography
as this reservoir was subjected to various impacts typical of industrial
use. The reservoir underwent shoreline habitat succession for almost 30
yr (1958-1987) while managed for stable water levels and influenced by
reactor thermal effluents. Warmer portions of the reservoir attracted
some of the population's larger males in winter, affected the timing of
their annual reproductive cycles, and possibly limited rates of reproduction
in the reservoir. Nevertheless, from the 1970s through the 1980s, the
Alligator population shifted from one dominated by larger adults, with
a relatively low rate of reproduction, to one more characteristic of a
stable age structure, including a higher reproductive rate. Relatively
low levels of contaminants, including radionuclides on the resident Alligators
were almost certainly inconsequential, but bioaccumulation of mercury
in the ecosystem was thought to have a greater potential for negative
impacts on larger, older individuals having longer lifetime exposures.
In 1991, a partial drawdown reduced the reservoir's surface area by almost
half to allow for repair of the retaining dam, with refill to full pool
occurring during 1994-1995. During this drawdown, Alligator movements
increased, particularly among males; emigration from the reservoir was
even documented for a few individuals. Reproduction and recruitment was
also reduced during the drawdown and immediately following the refill,
most likely due to the destruction of all emergent shoreline vegetation
in the reservoir thus reducing cover available to hatchlings and exposing
them to increased predation. In the summer of 2004, 9 yr after the refill
was completed, surveys recorded Alligator numbers comparable to those
15 yr earlier before the drawdown and refill. Considerable numbers of
juveniles were again present, confirming the resumption of successful
reproduction and recruitment. Apparently, such reservoirs can not only
provide adequate habitat to support healthy reproducing Alligator populations,
but these animals are able to sustain their numbers through partial drawdowns
and refills, as long as emergent shoreline vegetation is allowed to reestablish
and provide protective cover for hatchlings and juveniles. Brisbin,
I. L., Jr., R. A. Kennamer, and W. L. Stephens, Jr. 2008. Long-Term Population
Trends of American Alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) in a
Man-Made Reservoir: Responses to Environmental Perturbations Arising From
Management Activities. In: J. C. Mitchell, R. E. Jung Brown, and B. Bartholomew
(Eds.). Urban Herpetology. Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles.
Herpetological Conservation Number 3: 519-527.
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