Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Despite Buffers, Experimental Forest Clearcuts Impact Amphibian Body Size and Biomass

  • Jessica S. Veysey Powell ,

    jss4@unh.edu

    Affiliation Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire, United States of America

  • Kimberly J. Babbitt

    Affiliation Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire, United States of America

Abstract

Forest buffers are a primary tool used to protect wetland-dependent wildlife. Though implemented widely, buffer efficacy is untested for most amphibian species. Consequently, it remains unclear whether buffers are sufficient for maintaining amphibian populations and if so, how wide buffers should be. We present evidence from a six-year, landscape-scale experiment testing the impacts of clearcutting, buffer width, and hydroperiod on body size and condition and biomass of breeding adults for two amphibian species at 11 vernal pools in the northeastern United States. We randomly assigned treatments (i.e., reference, 100m buffer, 30m buffer) across pools, clearcut to create buffers, and captured all spotted salamanders and wood frogs. Clearcuts strongly and negatively impacted size, condition, and biomass, but wider buffers mitigated effect magnitude and duration. Among recaptured individuals, for example, 30m-treatment salamanders were predicted to be about 9.5 mm shorter than, while 100m-treatment salamanders did not differ in length from, reference-treatment salamanders. Similarly, among recaptured frogs, mean length in the 30m treatment was predicted to decrease by about 1 mm/year, while in the 100m and reference treatments, length was time-invariant. Some, but not all, metrics recovered with time. For example, female new-captured and recaptured salamanders were predicted, respectively and on average, to weigh 4.5 and 7 g less in the 30m versus reference treatment right after the cut. While recaptured-female mass was predicted to recover by 9.5 years post-cut, new-captured-female mass did not recover. Hydroperiod was an important mediator: in the 100m treatment, cutting predominately affected pools that were stressed hydrologically. Overall, salamanders and female frogs were impacted more than male frogs. Our results highlight the importance of individualized metrics like body size, which can reveal sublethal effects and illuminate mechanisms by which habitat disturbance impacts wildlife populations. Individualized metrics thus provide critical insights that complement species occurrence and abundance-based population assessments.

Introduction

Globally, forest ecosystems are experiencing intensifying stress as growing human populations demand more developed and agricultural land and larger volumes of forest products [1, 2]. Whether owners develop, harvest, or conserve their forests is a complex decision driven by global economic trends [1, 3]. Over the last two decades, increasing awareness that forests provide critical ecosystem services catalyzed interest in sustainable management programs that allow forest owners to harvest timber while maintaining ecosystem functions and biodiversity [46]. Developing sustainable forest-management plans can be difficult even for common species, however, given our sometimes rudimentary understanding of the complex interactions between forest components and ability to predict species’ responses to disturbance [7].

Amphibians can be particularly challenging to accommodate given their complex life cycles and diverse habitat needs [8]. In temperate forests, many amphibian species occupy wetlands during their egg and larval stages, but migrate hundreds of meters into adjacent forest as juveniles and adults (e.g., [911]). Forest harvesting can alter both the wetland and upland habitat of these species, with potentially negative consequences for population persistence [8]. In general, timber harvesting, especially clearcuts, is locally associated with reduced abundance and survival of numerous amphibian species across various forest types (e.g., [1214]). Responding to such scientific evidence, public pressure, economic incentive, and personal ecological ethic, some forest managers in temperate ecosystems have indicated willingness to integrate amphibian habitat needs into forest management plans [1517].

Forested buffers are a primary tool used to protect amphibians in such plans. Though buffers are implemented widely, their efficacy is untested for most amphibian species. Thus, it remains unclear whether buffers are sufficient for maintaining viable amphibian populations in working forests and if so, how wide buffers should be. Most studies that recommend amphibian buffers are based on observational data from unbuffered landscapes (e.g., [1820]). After reviewing the movement characteristics of 32 species across such landscapes, Semlitsch and Bodie [9] suggested that a 290-m life zone, centered like a buffer around a wetland, is necessary to protect the core habitat of most wetland-dependent amphibian species. Scientists and conservation planners frequently reference the need for a protective 290-m life zone, but policy-makers are slow to embrace such large constraints on land use [2123]. Compared to development and intensive agriculture, however, forestry can be a temporary disturbance. Because forests typically regenerate for several decades post-cut, habitat conditions are dynamic and amphibians may be able to persist even if buffers considerably smaller than 290 m are used [14, 21, 24].

Only a handful of studies have intentionally tested the impacts of buffer-mediated forest cutting on amphibians, however, and these have limited inference. Most were restricted to stream-side habitats (e.g., [25, 26]), used narrow buffers (i.e., <35 m; e.g., [2729]), and were conducted in northwestern North America. For some, forestry impacts were confounded by other management treatments or time of harvest [30, 31]. Some focused solely or partly on terrestrial species [29, 32] or only sampled in or extremely close to streams [33, 34]. SSSuch studies have limited applicability for amphibians that breed in lentic habitats, especially since post-breeding migrations for such species often extend far beyond 35 m.

To strengthen the scientific basis for making decisions about buffer width, we present evidence from a six-year, landscape-scale experiment testing the interactive impacts of clearcutting and buffer width on breeding-adult demography for two amphibian species at natural vernal pools in an industrial forest in the northeastern United States. To our knowledge, this is the first experiment to evaluate buffer efficacy for pool-breeding amphibians. In a previous paper issuing from this experiment [35], we showed that narrow buffers result in reduced recaptures of mature spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) and wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus) and altered sex ratios for spotted salamanders. Here, we assess how body size and condition and population biomass vary in response to buffer width for breeding adults of both species. Note that competitive and predaceous interactions between larvae of these two species can influence individual body size and condition and population biomass [3638], but we assumed such influence was comparable across pools (because both species were abundant at all pools) and did not assess interspecies interactions in this study.

Amphibian body size and condition are correlated with and can be proxies for multiple fitness measures including fecundity [39, 40], survival [41, 42], endurance [43, 44], and immunity [45, 46]. Biomass measures productivity and indexes energetic contributions of amphibian populations to aquatic and terrestrial components of forest ecosystems [47, 48]. Understanding how buffer width relates to body size and condition can provide important insights into the indirect pathways by which forestry affects amphibian populations [49]. Similarly, knowing how adult biomass changes in response to buffer width can help clarify how cutting influences ecosystem energy flows. Previous research suggests that forest cutting is associated with reduced amphibian size and body condition, but studies examining such indirect forestry effects are relatively rare, were not conducted in buffered landscapes, and produced results that were inconsistent across species and age classes (e.g., [5052]). Nonetheless, we expected that clearcutting would exert negative effects on amphibian body size and condition and adult biomass in our landscape, but that buffers would mitigate these effects. Because narrow buffers provide less forest habitat than wide buffers, we specifically predicted that as buffer width decreased across experimental treatments, the following characteristics of spotted-salamander and wood-frog breeding populations would also decrease:

  1. individual-adult length, mass, and body condition; and
  2. total breeding-adult biomass.

Methods

Study Site, Treatments, and Sampling

We conducted this research in a 700 km2 area of Hancock and Washington counties, Maine, USA (45°0’52”N, 44°48”32”N; 68°28’11”W, 67°53’10”W). Our entire study site was located in an industrial forest in Maine’s northern-interior climate zone and at the northern limit of the Downeast Ecoregion [53]. While micro-climate and micro-topographical conditions varied slightly across the site, all of our study pools were subjected to similar overall climatic and land-use conditions. For detailed descriptions of the site, experimental design, and sampling methods, see [35].

All pools were fish-free. Amphibian species composition was similar across pools, with the following species occurring at all pools: Ambystoma maculatum, Lithobates sylvaticus, Notophathalmus viridescens, Lithobates clamitans, Pseudacris crucifer, Lithobates catesbeianus, and Lithobates palustris. Ambystoma laterale and Anaxyrus americanus were present at all but two and one of the pools, respectively. Three additional species were rarely trapped during the experiment; these included: Desmognathus fuscus (a stream salamander; one individual), Hyla versicolor (23 individuals across seven wetlands), and Lithobates septentrionalis (11 individuals across six wetlands). Abiotic conditions were also similar across pools and compared to other woodland pools in the region (Table 1; [54, 55]). In particular, specific conductance values were relatively low and pH levels were somewhat acidic.

thumbnail
Table 1. Mean (± SE) of vernal pool abiotic characteristics by forestry treatmenta.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.t001

Between fall 2003 and spring 2004, the landowner created experimental buffers by clearcutting forest around the study pools. We randomly assigned each of the 11 pools to one of three treatments: reference (i.e., uncut; N = 3), 100m buffer (N = 4), or 30m buffer (N = 4). Pools in the two buffer treatments had, respectively, a 100-m or 30-m-wide upland buffer encircling the pool and a 100-m-wide concentric clearcut around the buffer (Fig 1).

thumbnail
Fig 1. Experimental design implemented at 11 natural vernal pools in east-central Maine, USA.

Undisturbed buffers of either 100m (left; n = 4) or 30m (right; n = 4) were left adjacent to pools and 100m wide clear cuts were created around the buffers. Forest beyond the clear cut was undisturbed. No cutting occurred at reference vernal pools (not shown; n = 3).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.g001

In summer and fall 2003, we surrounded each of the 11 pools with a drift fence / pit fall trap array [56]. From 2004 to 2009, we opened traps in the spring after ice-out and closed traps when a pool was dry for at least seven consecutive days or in the fall when hard frosts curbed amphibian movement. We checked pitfall traps daily during periods of frequent amphibian movement (i.e., April-May and July-September) and every one to five days during periods when amphibians were less active (i.e., June and October-early November). For 2009, we did not open traps at one 30m-buffer pool because the pool was inaccessible. Our analysis is robust to this missing data, however [57].

Using the pitfall traps, we captured, counted, and sexed all adult spotted salamanders and wood frogs exiting the pools. For each individual, we also measured snout-vent or snout-urostyle length (hereafter SVL) and mass. To distinguish recaptures from new-captures and minimize the chances of counting the same individual more than once a year, we marked all exiting adults with a pool-specific toe-clip [58]. For any individual that returned to a pool the same year it was toe-clipped, we only analyzed data from its first visit. For more information on the rationale behind, and potential limitations of, this marking method, see [35]. Post-processing, we released each animal on the opposite side of the fence from which we captured it.

We measured hydroperiod for each pool in each year as the number of days the pool held water between ice-out (i.e., < 75% of the pool was covered in ice) and the day the pool dried completely. To facilitate analyses, we assigned a hydroperiod end date of October 28th to pools that did not dry in a given year. We used this date because these pools still held water on this date, but it was late enough in the year that most amphibians at our study pools were inactive.

Statistical Analyses

To test the relative impacts of buffer treatment and hydroperiod on several measures of breeding-amphibian body condition and biomass, we conducted linear mixed effects regressions (LME) using the “lme” function in S-Plus 8.0 (Insightful Corporation, Seattle, WA, USA). We defined our study population as all adults that migrated to a pool and attempted to breed in a given year. Our results thus apply to a subset of each species’ total local population and do not account for adult salamanders that skipped breeding in a given year or juveniles. For the rest of this paper, we refer to our study population as the “breeding” population.

We assessed body condition using three size metrics: SVL, mass, and a body-condition index (BCI). We used the BCI as a relative measure of energy reserves. We calculated the BCI as the residuals of an ordinary least-squares regression of mass on SVL. To obtain normal residuals for the BCI, we square-root transformed the mass and SVL data for salamanders and log-transformed mass and SVL for frogs. We calculated separate BCIs for each sex within each species. Residual-based condition indices are an appropriate tool for our study for the following reasons. First, by calculating separate BCIs for each sex within each species, we avoided the scaling issues that result when comparing BCIs across groups known to differ in size due to heterauxesis and allomorphosis [59]. Second, after transformation, our data did not violate the critical, testable assumptions inherent to BCI analysis, namely: mass and SVL were linearly related, BCI was independent of SVL, and SVL is a reliable indicator of structural size [6062]. Finally, residual-based condition indices outperform similar measures of condition and accurately parallel energy reserves in a variety of species [6163].

We calculated biomass as the sum of the mass of all individuals, with separate biomasses calculated for each species and each sex at each wetland in each year. For each individual counted, but not weighed (N = 328 and 748 [or 9% and 11%], for spotted salamanders and wood frogs, respectively), we assigned a mass equivalent to the imputed mean mass for its respective category. We could not determine the sex of 22 spotted salamanders and 27 wood frogs that we found dead in traps. We did not use dead individuals in the biomass analysis. To meet the assumptions of LME, we used ln(biomass + 0.5) as the y variable in all biomass analyses, except for recaptured male spotted salamanders, for which we used the untransformed biomass.

Our predictor variables were: buffer treatment, mean-pool hydroperiod (i.e., the mean hydroperiod for each pool across the six study years), standard deviation of pool hydroperiod (calculated for each pool across the six study years), an interaction between treatment and mean-pool hydroperiod, and a pair of numeric dummy variables representing an interaction between treatment and study year. We used the first dummy variable (cut.year) to distinguish whether a pool was clearcut or not. We used the second dummy variable (30m.year) to indicate marginal impacts to 30m buffer pools. This treatment X year interaction allowed us to evaluate whether impacts to the cut treatments recovered with time. We defined ‘recover’ as: being restored to values similar to those in the reference treatment, after deviating from reference-treatment values at some prior time.

We performed separate regressions for each combination of capture status (i.e., new-capture or recapture) and sex, within each species, for a total of eight regression models per size metric. We treated year and pool ID as crossed random effects [57] in all models, except when the model would not converge with crossed effects, in which case we simplified the model to include either a random intercept for year or for wetland, whichever provided a better model fit, as determined by likelihood ratio tests (LRTs). Among the simplified models, we used year random intercepts for the SVL of new-captured and recaptured male wood frogs, the BCI of recaptured female wood frogs, and the BCI of male and female recaptured spotted salamanders. Similarly, we used wetland random intercepts for the BCI of new-captured male wood frogs. We also modeled the variance-covariance structure for each regression to account for heterogeneous variance across groups and correlation among individuals from the same wetland (S1 Appendix). We used LRTs to optimize the variance-covariance structure of each model, ANOVAs to assess the overall significance of each fixed effect, and t tests to determine the significance of different treatment levels (α = 0.05). We used treatment contrasts to compare the reference treatment to each respective cut treatment (i.e., by default, there was no direct comparison between the 100m and 30m treatments; [57]). Based on an a priori decision, when the hydroperiod interaction was not significant, we removed this interaction from the model and refit the model for the remaining fixed effects. In their final forms, all models satisfied the assumptions of LME. See [35] for further details on the dummy variables used in the year X treatment interaction and the model-selection process.

Ethics and Data Deposition Statements

We conducted all of the research in accordance with the rules of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at the University of New Hampshire (IACUC-UNH). IACUC-UNH approved our research protocol, as detailed in permits: 020601 and 050604. None of the captured species were protected or endangered under federal or state law. We conducted the research on private land, with permission from the landowner. For these reasons, no additional permits or permission were needed to conduct this work. The data used in this study are available from the Dryad database (http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.62ks6).

Results

Over the six study years, the 11 vernal pools produced over 47 kg of breeding spotted salamanders and 64 kg of breeding wood frogs. This biomass represented 3624 breeding spotted salamanders and 6521 breeding wood frogs. Descriptive statistics are provided in Table 2 for size and body condition and in Table 3 for biomass.

thumbnail
Table 2. Mean and variability of predictor and amphibian size variables, by species, capture status, sex, and forestry treatment.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.t002

thumbnail
Table 3. Mean and variability of total annual breeding amphibian biomass by species, forestry treatment, capture status, and sex.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.t003

Spotted Salamanders

In general, we found that spotted salamanders were smaller and had worse body condition at 30m, compared to reference, pools. For some, but not all, combinations of capture status, sex, and size metric, we observed partial recovery of the size metric at 30m-buffer pools over the six study years. We found less consistent relationships between treatment and biomass than between treatment and body size/condition. All results presented in this section were statistically significant, unless otherwise indicated.

Recaptured female salamanders were, throughout the study and on average, predicted to be 9.1 mm shorter at 30m versus reference pools (Table 4; Fig 2). (Note: no females were recaptured at 30m-buffer pools in 2009). Similarly, in the first recapture year (i.e., 2005), the average recaptured female at the 30m-buffer pools was predicted to weigh 7 g less, and have worse body condition, than her reference-pool counterpart. However, mass and BCI were both predicted to recover to mean reference levels by about 9.5 years post-cut. Conversely, recaptured-female body condition at the 100m-buffer pools worsened with time, so that by the study’s end, 100m-pool BCI was predicted to be about two times lower than the mean reference BCI. BCI also decreased, in all treatments, with increasing hydroperiod duration and variability. Additionally, recaptured female biomass was predicted to decrease by about 58% per year at 30m-buffer pools, but tended to increase (i.e., was marginally significant) by about 2.4% per each additional day of mean hydroperiod in all treatments. Finally, SVL, mass, and biomass did not differ significantly between the 100m and reference treatments.

thumbnail
Fig 2. Mean (±1SE) size of recaptured breeding female spotted salamanders at 11 vernal pools in east-central Maine, USA.

A) Snout-vent length (SVL; mm) across three experimental forestry treatments and B) body condition index (BCI) by forestry treatment and study year. Treatments were: reference (uncut), 100m undisturbed buffer, and 30m undisturbed buffer.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.g002

thumbnail
Table 4. Linear mixed regression results showing the relative impact of forestry treatment, hydroperiod, and study year on size, body condition, and total annual biomass of breeding spotted salamanders and wood frogs.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.t004

New-captured female spotted salamanders were predicted to weigh, on average and for the duration of the study, 4.5 g less at 30m-buffer pools than at reference pools (Fig 3). They also tended to have persistently worse body condition at 30m-buffer pools. During the first year post-cut, new-captured females were predicted to be, on average, 7.3 mm shorter in the 30m versus reference treatment. SVL at 30m-buffer pools was predicted to recover to mean reference levels by about 14 years post-cut. For new-captured female biomass, the 30m and reference treatments did not differ, but 100m-treatment biomass depended on mean pool hydroperiod. Short-hydroperiod pools were predicted to produce much lower biomass in the 100m, compared to the reference, treatment. For each additional day of mean hydroperiod, however, biomass at the 100m-buffer pools was predicted to increase by about 3.8%. Finally, SVL, mass, and BCI did not differ significantly between the 100m and reference treatments.

thumbnail
Fig 3. Mean (±1SE) size of new-captured breeding female spotted salamanders at 11 vernal pools in east-central Maine, USA.

A) Body mass (g) across three experimental forestry treatments and B) snout-vent length (SVL; mm) by forestry treatment and study year. Treatments were: reference (uncut), 100m undisturbed buffer, 30m undisturbed buffer.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.g003

For recaptured male spotted salamanders, both SVL and BCI were lower at 30m-buffer pools than reference pools and failed to recover to reference levels. On average, recaptured males were predicted to be 9.8 mm shorter at 30m-buffer pools. During the first recapture year, recaptured males were also predicted to weigh, on average, about 4 g less at 30m versus reference pools. A marginally significant 30mXyear interaction suggests recaptured male mass would take about 11 years to recover to mean reference levels. Recaptured male body condition and biomass were also influenced by hydroperiod. For all treatments, body condition declined with increasing mean hydroperiod and pools with more variable hydroperiod tended to support lower total biomass. For short-hydroperiod pools, we also found less biomass in the 100m versus the reference treatment, but the associated coefficient and standard error were quite large and should be cautiously interpreted. Nevertheless, for each additional day of mean hydroperiod, 100m biomass was predicted to increase by 2.5 g. Finally, SVL, mass and BCI did not differ significantly between the 100m and reference treatments.

New-captured male spotted salamanders were predicted, on average, to be 6.8 mm shorter, weigh 3.2 g less, and have worse body condition, at 30m-buffer pools than at reference pools during the first year post-cut (Fig 4). However, all three size metrics were predicted to recover with time at the 30m-buffer pools. The predicted recovery periods were, respectively: 8, 10, and 9 years, for SVL, mass, and BCI. Conversely, biomass at 30m-buffer pools was predicted to decrease by about 9% each year. Biomass at 100m-buffer pools depended on year and mean hydroperiod. During the first year post-cut, on average, less biomass was predicted at 100m versus reference pools. For each successive year, however, 100m biomass was predicted to increase by about 19%, so that by 3.5 years post-cut, similar amounts of biomass were predicted from typical 100m and reference pools. We also found that short-hydroperiod pools had much less biomass in the 100m versus reference treatment, but biomass increased at 100m-buffer pools by about 2.9% per additional day of mean hydroperiod. Though body mass and BCI did not differ significantly between the 100m and reference treatments, a marginally significant result indicated SVL increased by 0.5 mm per year in the 100m treatment. Finally and for all treatments, new-capture male mass and body condition tended to decrease as mean hydroperiod increased.

thumbnail
Fig 4. Mean (±1SE) size of breeding male spotted salamanders at 11 vernal pools in east-central Maine, USA.

A) Body condition index (BCI) of recaptured males across three experimental forestry treatments and B) body mass (g) of new-captured males by forestry treatment and study year. Treatments were: reference (uncut), 100m undisturbed buffer, and 30m undisturbed buffer.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.g004

Wood Frogs

For wood frog size and biomass generally, females and recaptured adults were more sensitive to buffer treatment than males and new-captured adults, respectively. Additionally, hydroperiod was a strong predictor across size metric, sex, and capture status. All results presented in this section were statistically significant, unless otherwise indicated.

For recaptured female wood frogs, BCI (Fig 5) and biomass (marginally significant) were predicted to be, on average, lower at 30m-buffer pools than at reference pools, and did not recover during the study. Specifically, biomass in the 30m treatment was only about 1/3rd of that in the reference treatment. Further, SVL was predicted to decrease by 1.32 mm/year at the 30m-buffer pools. At short-hydroperiod pools, biomass was lower in the 100m versus reference treatment, but for each additional day of mean hydroperiod, 100m biomass was predicted to increase by about 3% (Fig 6). Body condition worsened as hydroperiod variability increased. Finally, recaptured female mass was unrelated to treatment, year, or hydroperiod; and SVL and BCI did not differ significantly between the 100m and reference treatment.

thumbnail
Fig 5. Mean (±1SE) size of recaptured breeding female wood frogs at 11 vernal pools in east-central Maine, USA.

A) Body condition index (BCI) across three experimental forestry treatments and B) snout-urodyle length (SUL; mm) by forestry treatment and study year. Treatments were: reference (uncut), 100m undisturbed buffer, and 30m undisturbed buffer.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.g005

thumbnail
Fig 6. Total annual biomass (g) of recaptured breeding wood frogs at 11 vernal pools in east-central Maine, USA.

A) Mean (±1SE) biomass of male frogs by forestry treatment and study year and B) biomass of female frogs by forestry treatment and mean pool hydroperiod (days). Treatments were: reference (uncut), 100m undisturbed buffer, 30m undisturbed buffer.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.g006

For new-captured female wood frogs, biomass in the 30m treatment was predicted to decrease by about 14% per year. Similar to recaptured females, new-captured female biomass at short-hydroperiod pools was lower in the 100m versus reference treatment, but 100m biomass was predicted to increase with each additional day of mean hydroperiod by about 1.4%. In both cut treatments, SVL and mass were predicted to increase post-cut, by 0.3 mm/year and 0.2 g/year, respectively. Finally, BCI was unrelated to treatment, year, or hydroperiod.

For recaptured male wood frogs, SVL and biomass were predicted to decrease at 30m-buffer pools by 0.9 mm/year and about 44% per year, respectively (Figs 6 and 7; the pattern was marginally significant for biomass). Similarly, but across all treatments, as hydroperiod variability increased, SVL, mass, and BCI (marginally significant) decreased, such that for each additional day of hydroperiod variability, frogs were predicted to be 0.04 mm shorter and weigh 0.03 g less. Conversely, for each additional day of mean hydroperiod, recaptured male biomass was predicted to increase by about 1.5%. Recaptured male mass and BCI were unrelated to treatment. Finally, both SVL and biomass did not differ significantly between the 100m and reference treatments.

thumbnail
Fig 7. Mean (±1SE) size of new-captured breeding female wood frogs at 11 vernal pools in east-central Maine, USA.

A) Body mass (g) and B) snout-urodyle length (SUL; mm) by forestry treatment and study year. Treatments were: reference (uncut), 100m undisturbed buffer, and 30m undisturbed buffer.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.g007

For new-captured male wood frogs, for every additional day of hydroperiod variability, body mass was predicted to decrease by 0.03 g and BCI tended to decrease. For each additional day of mean hydroperiod duration, however, biomass was predicted to increase by about 1.5%. SVL, body mass, BCI, and biomass of new-captured males were all unrelated to treatment and year; SVL also did not differ with hydroperiod.

Discussion

This is the first landscape-scale experiment to test how buffer width affects the impacts of forest clearcutting on amphibian body size, condition, and biomass at natural vernal pools. As hypothesized, we generally found that amphibians were smaller, had lower energy reserves, and supported less biomass at pools with a narrow 30m buffer versus 100m-buffer or reference pools. The response at 100m-buffer pools was typically mediated by hydroperiod: short-hydroperiod pools had less biomass in the 100m versus reference treatment. Overall, spotted salamanders were more affected than wood frogs and recaptured adults were more sensitive than new-captured adults. Though some size and condition metrics started to recover during the first six years post-cut, other impacts persisted or worsened. Our study demonstrates that clearcutting is associated with strong sub-lethal effects on local amphibian populations. These effects potentially signal reduced population resilience, which could alter local and regional population and community dynamics. Wider buffers helped mitigate the magnitude and duration of these effects.

Size and Condition

Mechanisms.

Food energy is allocated to one of four uses: maintenance, growth, reproduction, or storage. As ectotherms, amphibians have low maintenance costs and efficiently convert food to biomass [64]. Various factors can disrupt this efficiency, causing reallocation of energetic investments and reduced body size and condition. In clearcuts, high temperatures and low humidity [6567] can elevate metabolic rates [68, 69] and maintenance costs [42, 70], while inhibiting foraging [71, 72]. Higher predation risk [12, 73] or less prey in cuts or along cut edges could also limit food intake [70, 74]. Such problems can compound if robust individuals claim prime buffer habitat, ‘despotically’ forcing stunted individuals into the cut [49, 51, 75]. Alternatively, individuals may avoid the cut by remaining in the buffer, causing overcrowding. This could limit food consumption and elevate maintenance costs, through increased competition for prey and shelter [7678], predation risk [12], and the stress associated with competitive interactions and predator avoidance [7981]. With increased maintenance and reduced food intake, individuals would be forced to invest less in reproduction, growth, and/or storage. Negative feedback, whereby small adults produce small eggs [39, 82], which become disadvantaged larvae [76, 83, 84], which metamorphose into stunted adults [8587], could reinforce this pattern. Alternatively, large or well-conditioned adults might be killed during cutting or emigrate to other pools [88] leaving small, weak individuals behind.

Overall, reduced size and body condition suggest poor habitat quality in the 30m treatment [81, 89, 90]. By comparing SVL, mass, and condition, we can discern how habitat degradation altered energy allocation across treatments, species, sexes, and capture classes and start to elucidate mechanisms by which timber harvest influences amphibian populations. For recaptured spotted salamanders, SVL showed no recovery during the six study years, whereas female mass and condition were predicted to recover by about 9 years post-cut and male mass by about 11 years. Clearly, recaptured adults did not invest in structural growth, but prioritized maintenance, reproduction, and, for females, storage. These recovery trajectories suggest recaptured salamander size and condition take 10+ years after a clearcut to either rebound or adjust to reduced habitat carrying capacity [81]. Among new-captures, by contrast, the SVL of both sexes and male mass and body condition, were recovering by the experiment’s end. New-captured salamanders include immigrants and residents who previously refrained from breeding. New-capture recovery trajectories suggest several possible conclusions. First, 30m-treatment habitat alterations were least severe for male new-captures. Second, large (long) immigrants perceived the 30m treatment as viable habitat only after several years of cut regeneration. Finally, resident new-capture salamanders adopted differing allocation strategies, with some breeding shortly after the cut, at the expense of structural growth; and others prioritizing growth by delaying breeding for several years post-cut.

Among recaptured wood frogs in the 30m treatment, mean SVL decreased over time, suggesting that frogs invested less energy in structural growth and/or mean age declined over the course of the study. Similarly, females had persistently poor body condition, indicating insufficient food in-take to amass fat reserves. However, buffer treatment did not influence either sex’s mass or male body condition, suggesting recaptured frogs favored maintenance, reproduction, and (among males) fat storage, over growth. Previous research from unbuffered landscapes also found anuran growth constrained in clearcuts versus uncut forest [51, 91, 92]. In the current study, we differentiate between sexes and capture classes, demonstrating that both male and female recaptured frogs experience reduced growth in habitat disturbed by clearcutting, even when frogs can freely move between a 30m buffer, clearcut, and forest beyond the cut. By contrast, new-captured frog size and condition did not differ across treatments, implying that immigrant frogs traversed cuts without significant energetic losses.

In general, spotted salamanders experienced stronger negative effects in the 30m treatment than wood frogs. We suggest three explanations for this inter-species difference. First, both species migrate on rainy nights when desiccation is unlikely [11, 93, 94], but wood frogs are more vagile [88, 95, 96] and may cross cuts more quickly [10, 11], spending fewer days exposed to severe clearcut conditions. Further, salamanders may be more likely to linger in clearcuts, because salamanders primarily shelter in underground burrows [9799]. In our cuts, stumps were mostly left in place and no mechanical site preparation occurred, such that burrow structure may have been largely preserved [11]. Because aboveground weather is more extreme in clearcuts than forests [10, 65, 67], salamanders in cuts may be trapped in burrows for extended periods, minimizing foraging, and thereby negatively impacting size and condition [70, 100]. Wood frogs, however, frequently shelter in leaf litter [93, 101]. Since young clearcuts have less litter than forests [51, 102, 103], frogs likely minimized time in cuts, only entering to migrate through to distant forests [10]. Finally, spotted salamanders may be more sensitive to terrestrial density dependence than wood frogs. Though both species may crowd into 30m buffers, the consequences may be more negative for salamanders for various reasons. For example, burrows are likely scarcer than leaf litter and salamanders may be forced to share burrows or remain unsheltered. Forced sharing may increase agonistic interactions, causing greater stress [80] and physical trauma [104, 105]. In turn, salamanders may limit foraging to avoid competitive interactions [104, 106] or expend more energy while foraging over a broader area [81]. Small salamanders may also be forced into suboptimal edge or cut habitat by larger competitors [49, 51, 107], negatively reinforcing their stature.

Implications.

Reduced size and body condition are linked to numerous individual traits that can scale up to detrimentally impact local and regional populations. We categorize individual traits into reproductive, performance, and survival effects. Among the reproductive impacts, small size is associated with decreased clutch mass and volume [39, 108], egg size [39, 82, 108], egg nutrition [39], number of eggs [82, 109, 110], mating success [111113], and survival during breeding [112]; and increased time to maturity and, for salamanders, inter-breeding interval [81, 82]. Poor body condition can alter mating behavior [114, 115], leading to lower reproductive success [115, 116]. Small size can limit performance through reduced stamina [43, 117, 118], jump distance [44, 119], and migration distance [97, 120], which may inhibit an animal’s ability to escape predators or access good-quality habitat. As for survival, small individuals tend to store fewer lipids [82, 86, 121] and dehydrate faster [42, 122], leading to lower survival, especially under severe weather conditions [86, 123, 124]. Body size also influences population spatial structure: small individuals may be competitively excluded from prime habitats [51, 107] or crowd around water sources [125].

Ultimately, individual effects can alter local and regional population dynamics. Small amphibians of poor body condition are vulnerable to extreme weather and other stressors [42, 126, 127], can depress breeding population size through delayed maturity [128, 129] or skipped breeding events [130132], and may have low reproductive success [39, 108, 127]. A population of vulnerable individuals is likely less resilient to disturbance and other stressors and may rely excessively on immigration or adult survival to persist [20, 133, 134]. Reduced reproductive success may also translate to fewer or less robust dispersers [135, 136], depressing gene flow and altering regional population dynamics. Where a local population siphons immigrants from the regional disperser pool and produces less viable dispersers, it may act as a regional sink. Though total breeding-adult abundance was not reduced, we did find that both species’ breeding-population structure was altered, with fewer recaptured amphibians and female salamanders present at 30m-buffer pools, confirming that this treatment did indeed serve as sink habitat and that reproductive potential was diminished [35].

Biomass

Mechanisms.

Analyzing how adult-amphibian biomass varied across treatments is key to understanding how clearcuts alter ecosystem flows and community interactions. Adult spotted salamanders and wood frogs are important predators of forest-floor invertebrates [137139] and efficiently convert invertebrate to amphibian biomass [64, 140]. In turn, both species are a vital food source for decomposers and larger predators [71, 137, 140] DDD. Adults also provide high-quality food to vernal-pool communities via eggmass deposition or if adults perish while breeding [47, 71, 141]. Consequently, both species are an important conduit for the flow of forest nutrients and energy into vernal pools and link multiple trophic levels in both subsystems [47, 141, 142]. As long-lived, fossorial adults, spotted salamanders also enhance soil fertility and stabilize ecosystem fluxes [140]. Despite these contributions, few studies have examined forestry impacts on amphibian biomass. Available studies show amphibian biomass is generally lower in recent cuts, but none included buffers in the study design [102, 143, 144]; but see [71].

In our experiment, clearcutting was associated with reduced amphibian biomass, but more strongly in the 30m than the 100m buffer treatment. In fact for both species, biomass at 30m-buffer pools declined over time, suggesting deteriorating habitat quality or a lagged response to cutting. For wood frogs, biomass and SVL declined in tandem at 30m-buffer pools, suggesting reduced structural growth as the reason for diminished biomass. For spotted salamanders, biomass fell despite some recovery of individual size and condition and relatively stable breeding abundances [35], suggesting no single driver of salamander biomass loss.

At 100m-buffer pools, adult biomass production was mediated by hydroperiod, such that short-hydroperiod, 100m-buffer pools produced much less biomass than short-hydroperiod reference pools. For spotted salamanders, this pattern mirrored adult abundance [35], not size. For wood frogs, no particular driver was apparent, but only females were affected. It is unsurprising that biomass and hydroperiod were related, since hydroperiod is a determinative force in vernal-pool systems, influencing species distributions [55, 145, 146], community composition [147149] and larval growth [150152] and survival [100, 153, 154]. It is well established that spotted salamander and wood frog abundance generally increase with vernal-pool hydroperiod [155157]. If one considers only short-hydroperiod pools, however, the biomass difference between 100m and reference pools is striking. Apparently, cutting degraded habitat quality in the 100m treatment, but this only occurred, or was only apparent, if the population was also stressed hydrologically.

Implications.

Adult biomass was reduced at 30m-buffer pools and short-hydroperiod 100m-buffer pools, limiting the amount of high-quality food available to amphibian predators and detrivores in and around these pools [71, 141]. Lower biomass also likely means reduced nutrient and energy subsidies from forests into pools and modified food webs in both subsystems [47, 141]. Salamander biomass declines may additionally serve to destabilize ecosystem processes, since their biomass is a long-term storage location for nutrients and energy [140]. With less salamander biomass, resources may flow more quickly through food webs, resulting in more extreme population fluctuations at other trophic levels [71, 140].

Conclusions

Traditionally, researchers use species occurrence and abundance to assess disturbance impacts [49, 89, 90]. While valuable, such metrics describe population responses, which may only be discernable after multiple breeding cycles [81, 92, 158]. Individualized metrics, like body size and condition, may be more sensitive since population changes only accrue after enough individuals are affected. Individual metrics can forewarn lagged population responses, reveal sub-lethal effects that undermine population resilience, and illuminate mechanisms driving population responses [81, 89, 90]. Condition, in particular, is often used to index habitat quality since it represents individual fat reserves, which are a function of prey availability and the metabolic demands of a habitat [89, 90, 159]. By contrast, biomass is an infrequently used metric that extends abundance data and connects population changes to ecosystem processes [48, 160].

The reduced body size and condition that we observed indicate clearcutting degraded amphibian habitat quality in the 30m treatment. In response, individuals shifted energy allocation away from structural growth and, in many cases, fat storage. Individual costs of energetic redistribution are substantial, but collective costs may be greater, and potentially include constrained local reproductive output and altered regional population dynamics. Our biomass results also suggest that habitat quality declined at 30m-buffer pools, but further indicate synergistic effects of cutting and hydroperiod in the 100m treatment. More broadly, our biomass results imply that clearcuts altered food-web dynamics and ecosystems fluxes, within and between forests and vernal pools. Forest managers wishing to minimize amphibian size, condition, and biomass impacts should use buffers that are greater than 30 m wide and incorporate hydroperiod into management decisions. Where amphibian conservation is a primary objective and hydroperiod is short (i.e., < 4 months; [55, 155, 156]), buffers wider than 100 m may be necessary. Where amphibians are one of several concerns, buffering pools with hydroperiods longer than four months may provide the greatest conservation-investment return. Note that our results describe amphibian response to a single clearcut configuration (i.e., circular, 100-m wide). Different responses might be observed with alternative clearcut designs, but investigating other designs was beyond the scope of our project. Similarly, we did not examine the potential impacts of predator and competitor community composition, microhabitat, or water chemistry on our response variables. Though we recognize this as a potential study limitation, we do not expect that these factors significantly influenced our cross-treatment analyses for multiple reasons. First, we designed our experiment and statistical analysis to minimize the potential impacts of such within-pool factors. Second, all study pools were fish-free and similar with regard to amphibian community composition and basic water chemistry parameters.

Additional research is needed to understand how individual impacts scale up to influence local and regional population dynamics and ecosystem function. Particular attention should be paid to the potential for differential effects across diverse landscapes. While multiple previous studies from various bioregions similarly demonstrate decreased amphibian body size and condition in response to habitat disturbance (e.g., [91, 159, 161]) and weather stress [127, 162, 163], other studies suggest more complex interactions between individual responses and exposure to stressful conditions (e.g., [164166]). Likewise, though logging often exerts negative effects on amphibian populations, this may not be universal. For instance, populations of species that evolved in frequently disturbed landscapes may adapt more easily to habitat changes wrought by timber harvests. This appears to be the case, for example, with generalist anuran species in the temperate eucalyptus forests of New South Wales, Australia [17]. Different processes may dampen the negative effects of logging in other landscapes.

Our landscape is largely forested and our cuts regenerated mostly undisturbed. Clearcut structure and micro-climate can change rapidly with regeneration [51, 71, 167]. Cuts that are initially unsuitable for amphibians should regain suitability with time [71, 143, 168]. Though cutting strongly impacted individual amphibians, especially in the 30m treatment, certain metrics, like recaptured salamander mass, started to rebound by the study’s end. In this landscape, there seems to be a vulnerability window of 8 to 14+ years post-clearcut, when adult body size, condition, and biomass are reduced and local populations may be particularly sensitive to additional disturbance or stressors. If regeneration continues undisrupted and habitat quality improves, individual traits likely recover and the vulnerability window closes. Lacking additional stressors, local population persistence and abundance may remain relatively stable and regional population dynamics may be little affected. Recent genetic studies from our landscape support this hypothesis. While clearcutting strongly impacted individual amphibians and increased population vulnerability at many of our focal pools, spotted salamander and wood frog populations across the broader industrial forest demonstrated high genetic connectivity, suggesting regional population resilience [169, 170].

Ultimately, forest managers must consider the cumulative impacts of cutting on a landscape and whether additional stressors are likely to compound the local effects of any single cut. Existing practices, including strategic clearcut rotation on a multi-decadal interval [5, 171], may be sufficient to maintain amphibian connectivity with minimal buffering, given current climatic conditions and forest-product demand. If projections for the northeast are accurate, however, and summers become hotter [172] with more frequent droughts [173], while forest harvests intensify [2], landscape resistance to amphibian movement may increase [11, 174] and regional connectivity be disrupted. In this case, buffers will be a critical tool for maintaining local population resilience in forestry-based landscapes. More broadly, we expect stronger negative impacts to amphibian body size, condition, biomass, and connectivity in suburban and urban landscapes, where a greater proportion of the land area is permanently altered and the inter-pool matrix is less permeable [175177]. In this context, buffers may be essential to local population resilience, but only when combined with conservation of connective habitat to simultaneously ensure the possibility of rescue and recolonization from the broader meta-population [22, 178] and if the design is tailored to the specific region and landscape [17, 19, 179].

Supporting Information

S1 Appendix. Appendix 1.

Variance-covariance structure of size, condition, and biomass regression models.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143505.s001

(DOC)

Acknowledgments

We thank International Paper Company and Sustainable Forestry Technologies for their cooperation and permission to conduct research on their property. We appreciate the counsel of M Baber, A Cooper, M Ducey, and J Purrenhage and the dedication of our graduate students and field technicians. We thank D Hocking and one anonymous reviewer for thoughtful manuscript reviews.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: KJB. Performed the experiments: KJB JSVP. Analyzed the data: JSVP. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: KJB. Wrote the paper: JSVP KJB.

References

  1. 1. FAO (2012) State of the World's Forests 2012. Rome, United Nations, Food and Agriculture Organization, 60 pp.
  2. 2. Irland LC (1999) The Northeast's Changing Forest. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 432 p.
  3. 3. Friedland AJ, Jones RT, Gross TF, Blackmer SD (2004) Towards a sustainable northern forest. Journal of Sustainable Forestry 18: 1–22.
  4. 4. Peterson CE, Anderson PD (2009) Large-scale interdisciplinary experiments inform current and future forestry management options in the US Pacific Northwest. Forest Ecology and Management 258: 409–414.
  5. 5. Seymour RS, Guldin J, Marshall D, Palik B (2006) Large-scale, long-term silvicultural experiments in the United States: historical overview and contemporary examples. Allgemeine Forst und Jagdzeitung 177: 104–112.
  6. 6. Klenner W, Arsenault A, Brockerhoff EG, Vyse A (2009) Biodiversity in forest ecosystems and landscapes: A conference to discuss future directions in biodiversity management for sustainable forestry. Forest Ecology and Management 258: S1–S4.
  7. 7. Peterson CE, RA Monserud (2002) Compatibility between wood production and other values and uses on forested lands: a problem analysis. General Technical Report PNW-GTR-564. Portland, OR, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 51 pp.
  8. 8. deMaynadier PG, Houlahan JE (2008) Conserving vernal pool amphibians in managed forests. In: Calhoun AJK, deMaynadier PG, editors. Science and conservation of vernal pools in northeastern North America. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. pp. 392.
  9. 9. Semlitsch RD, Bodie JR (2003) Biological criteria for buffer zones around wetlands and riparian habitats for amphibians and reptiles. Conservation Biology 17: 1219–1228.
  10. 10. Freidenfelds NA, Purrenhage JL, Babbitt KJ (2011) The effects of clearcuts and forest buffer size on post-breeding emigration of adult wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus). Forest Ecology and Management 261: 2115–2122.
  11. 11. Veysey JS, Babbitt KJ, Cooper A (2009) An experimental assessment of buffer width: Implications for salamander migratory behavior. Biological Conservation 142: 2227–2239.
  12. 12. Rittenhouse TAG, Semlitsch RD, Thompson FR (2009) Survival costs associated with wood frog breeding migrations: effects of timber harvest and drought. Ecology 90: 1620–1630. pmid:19569376
  13. 13. Renken RB, Gram WK, Fantz DK, Richter SC, Miller TJ, Ricke KB, et al. (2004) Effects of forest management on amphibians and reptiles in Missouri Ozark forests. Conservation Biology 18: 174–188.
  14. 14. Tilghman JM, Ramee SW, Marsh DM (2012) Meta-analysis of the effects of canopy removal on terrestrial salamander populations in North America. Biological Conservation 152: 1–9.
  15. 15. GFGS (2009) Good Forestry in the Granite State: August 24, 2009 Minutes. Good Forestry in the Granite State: Steering Committee Minutes. Durham, NH, University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension, Available: http://goodforestry.pbworks.com/w/page/14870035/August%2024%2C%202009%20Minutes. Accessed 29 August 2013.
  16. 16. Beese WJ, Dunsworth BG, Smith NJ (2005) Variable-retention adaptive management experiments: testing new approaches for managing British Columbia's coastal forests. In: Peterson CE, Maguire DA, editors. Balancing ecosystem values: innovative experiments for sustainable forestry: proceedings of a conference. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. pp. 55–64.
  17. 17. Lemckert FL (2011) Managing pond-breeding anurans in the selectively harvested forests of coastal New South Wales, Australia. Forest Ecology and Management 262: 1199–1204.
  18. 18. Crawford JA, Semlitsch RD (2007) Estimation of core terrestrial habitat for stream-breeding salamanders and delineation of riparian buffers for protection of biodiversity. Conservation Biology 21: 152–158. pmid:17298521
  19. 19. Ficetola GF, Padoa-Schioppa E, De Bernardi F (2009) Influence of landscape elements in riparian buffers on the conservation of semiaquatic amphibians. Conservation Biology 23: 114–123. pmid:18983602
  20. 20. Harper EB, Rittenhouse TAG, Semlitsch RD (2008) Demographic consequences of terrestrial habitat loss for pool-breeding amphibians: Predicting extinction risks associated with inadequate size of buffer zones. Conservation Biology 22: 1205–1215. pmid:18717698
  21. 21. Hart DD, Calhoun AJK (2010) Rethinking the role of ecological research in the sustainable management of freshwater ecosystems. Freshwater Biology 55: 258–269.
  22. 22. Bauer DM, Paton PWC, Swallow SK (2010) Are wetland regulations cost effective for species protection? A case study of amphibian metapopulations. Ecological Applications 20: 798–815. pmid:20437965
  23. 23. Lee P, Smyth C, Boutin S (2004) Quantitative review of riparian buffer width guidelines from Canada and the United States. Journal of Environmental Management 70: 165–180. pmid:15160742
  24. 24. Rittenhouse TAG, Harper EB, Rehard LR, Semlitsch RD (2008) The role of microhabitats in the desiccation and survival of anurans in recently harvested oak-hickory forest. Copeia 2008: 807–814.
  25. 25. Vesely DG, McComb WC (2002) Salamander abundance and amphibian species richness in riparian buffer strips in the Oregon coast range. Forest Science 48: 291–297.
  26. 26. Perkins DW, Hunter ML Jr. (2006) Effects of riparian timber management on amphibians in Maine. The Journal of Wildlife Management 70: 657–670.
  27. 27. Johnston B, Frid L (2002) Clearcut logging restricts the movements of terrestrial Pacific giant salamanders (Dicamptodon tenebrosus Good). Canadian Journal of Zoology 80: 2170–2177.
  28. 28. Pollett KL, MacCracken JG, MacMahon JA (2010) Stream buffers ameliorate the effects of timber harvest on amphibians in the Cascade Range of Southern Washington, USA. Forest Ecology and Management 260: 1083–1087.
  29. 29. Hawkes VC, Gregory PT (2012) Temporal changes in the relative abundance of amphibians relative to riparian buffer width in western Washington, USA. Forest Ecology and Management 274: 67–80.
  30. 30. Cole EC, McComb WC, Newton M, Chambers CL, Leeming JP (1997) Response of amphibians to clearcutting, burning, and glyphosate application in the Oregon Coast Range. The Journal of Wildlife Management 61: 656–664.
  31. 31. Hannon SJ, Paszkowski CA, Boutin S, DeGroot J, Macdonald SE, Wheatley M, et al. (2002) Abundance and species composition of amphibians, small mammals, and songbirds in riparian forest buffer strips of varying widths in the boreal mixedwood of Alberta. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 32: 1784.
  32. 32. Apodaca JJ, Godwin JC (2015) Effects of buffering key habitat for terrestrial salamanders: implications for the management of the federally threatened Red Hills salamander (Phaeognathus hubrichti) and other imperiled Plethodontids. Forests 6: 827–838.
  33. 33. Dupuis L, Steventon D (1999) Riparian management and the tailed frog in northern coastal forests. Forest Ecology and Management 124: 35–43.
  34. 34. Olson DH, Rugger C (2007) Preliminary study of the effects of headwater riparian reserves with upslope thinning on stream habitats and amphibians in western Oregon. Forest Science 53: 331–342.
  35. 35. Veysey Powell JS, Babbitt KJ (2015) An experimental test of buffer utility as a technique for managing pool-breeding amphibians. PLoS ONE 10: e0133642. pmid:26196129
  36. 36. Holbrook CT, Petranka JW (2004) Ecological interactions between Rana sylvatica and Ambystoma maculatum: Evidence of interspecific competition and facultative intraguild predation. Copeia 932–939.
  37. 37. Petranka JW, Kennedy CA (1999) Pond tadpoles with generalized morphology: is it time to reconsider their functional roles in aquatic communities? Oecologia 120:
  38. 38. Petranka JW, Rushlow AW, Hopey ME (1998) Predation by tadpoles of Rana sylvatica on embryos of Ambystoma maculatum: Implications of ecological role reversals by Rana (predator) and Ambystoma (prey). Herpetologica 54: 1–13.
  39. 39. Berven KA (1988) Factors affecting variation in reproductive traits within a population of wood frogs (Rana sylvatica). Copeia 1988: 605–615.
  40. 40. Semlitsch RD (1985) Reproductive strategy of a facultatively paedomorphic salamander Ambystoma talpoideum. Oecologia 65: 305–313.
  41. 41. Berven KA (1990) Factors affecting population fluctuations in larval and adult stages of the wood frog (Rana sylvatica). Ecology 71: 1599–1608.
  42. 42. Spotila JR (1972) Role of temperature and water in the ecology of lungless salamanders. Ecological Monographs 42: 95–125.
  43. 43. Beck CW, Congdon JD (2000) Effects of age and size at metamorphosis on performance and metabolic rates of southern toad, Bufo terrestris, metamorphs. Functional Ecology 14: 32–38.
  44. 44. John-Alder HB, Morin PJ (1990) Effects of larval density on jumping ability and stamina in newly metamorphosed Bufo woodhousii fowleri. Copeia 1990: 856–860.
  45. 45. Lochmiller RL, Deerenberg C (2000) Trade-offs in evolutionary immunology: just what is the cost of immunity? Oikos 88: 87–98.
  46. 46. McMurry ST, m LM, Dupler KD, Gutierrez MB (2009) Influence of land use on body size and splenic cellularity in wetland breeding Spea spp. Journal of Herpetology 43: 421–430.
  47. 47. Regester KJ, Lips KR, Whiles MR (2006) Energy flow and subsidies associated with the complex life cycle of ambystomatid salamanders in ponds and adjacent forest in Southern Illinois. Oecologia 147: 303–314. pmid:16200399
  48. 48. Deichmann JL, Duellman WE, Williamson GB (2008) Predicting biomass from snout-vent length in new world frogs. Journal of Herpetology 42: 238–245.
  49. 49. Welsh HH Jr., Pope KL, Wheeler CA (2008) Using multiple metrics to assess the effects of forest succession on population status: A comparative study of two terrestrial salamanders in the US Pacific Northwest. Biological Conservation 141: 1149–1160.
  50. 50. Karraker NE, Welsh HH Jr. (2006) Long-term impacts of even-aged timber management on abundance and body condition of terrestrial amphibians in Northwestern California. Biological Conservation 131: 132–140.
  51. 51. Patrick DA, Hunter ML Jr., Calhoun AJK (2006) Effects of experimental forestry treatments on a Maine amphibian community. Forest Ecology and Management 234: 323–332.
  52. 52. Chazal AC, Niewiarowski PH (1998) Responses of mole salamanders to clearcutting: using field experiments in forest management. Ecological Applications 8: 1133–1143.
  53. 53. MEDIFW (2005) Maine's Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Strategy. Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife, Available: http://www.maine.gov/ifw/wildlife/reports/wap.html. Accessed 22 October 2015.
  54. 54. Turtle SL (2000) Embryonic survivorship of the spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum) in roadside and woodland vernal pools in southeastern New Hampshire. Journal of Herpetology 34: 60–67.
  55. 55. Babbitt KJ, Baber MJ, Tarr TL (2003) Patterns of larval amphibian distribution along a wetland hydroperiod gradient. Canadian Journal of Zoology 81: 1539–1552.
  56. 56. Willson JD, Gibbons JW (2010) Drift fences, coverboards, and other traps. In: Dodd CK Jr., editor. Amphibian Ecology and Conservation: A Handbook of Techniques. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 229–245.
  57. 57. Pinheiro JC, Bates DM (2000) Mixed-Effects Models in S and S-PLUS. New York: Springer. xvi + 528 p.
  58. 58. Ferner JW (2010) Measuring and marking post-metamorphic amphibians. In: Dodd C Jr, editor. Amphibian Ecology and Conservation: A Handbook of Techniques. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 123–141.
  59. 59. Peig J, Green AJ (2010) The paradigm of body condition: a critical reappraisal of current methods based on mass and length. Functional Ecology 24: 1323–1332.
  60. 60. Green AJ (2001) Mass/length residuals: measures of body condition or generators of spurious results? Ecology 82: 1471–1483.
  61. 61. Schulte-Hostedde AI, Zinner B, Millar JS, Hickling GJ (2005) Restitution of mass-size residuals: validating body condition indices. Ecology 86: 155–163.
  62. 62. Bancila RI, Hartel T, Plaiasu R, Smets J, Cogalniceanu D (2010) Comparing three body condition indices in amphibians: a case study of yellow-bellied toad Bombina variegata. Amphibia-Reptilia 31: 558–562.
  63. 63. Ardia DR (2005) Super size me: an experimental test of the factors affecting lipid content and the ability of residual body mass to predict lipid stores in nestling European Starlings. Functional Ecology 19: 414–420.
  64. 64. Pough FH (1980) The advantages of ectothermy for tetrapods. The American Naturalist 115: 92–112.
  65. 65. Rothermel BB, Luhring TM (2005) Burrow availability and desiccation risk of mole salamanders (Ambystoma talpoideum) in harvested versus unharvested forest stands. Journal of Herpetology 39: 619–626.
  66. 66. Harpole DN, Haas CA (1999) Effects of seven silvicultural treatments on terrestrial salamanders. Forest Ecology and Management 114: 349–356.
  67. 67. Chen J, Saunders SC, Crow TR, Naiman RJ, Brosofske KD, Mroz GD, et al. (1999) Microclimate in forest ecosystem and landscape ecology. BioScience 49: 288–297.
  68. 68. Whitford WG, Hutchison VH (1967) Body size and metabolic rate in salamanders. Physiological Zoology 40: 127–133.
  69. 69. Whitford WG (1973) The effects of temperature on respiration in the Amphibia. American Zoologist 13: 505–512.
  70. 70. Homyack JA, Haas CA, Hopkins WA (2011) Energetics of surface-active terrestrial salamanders in experimentally harvested forest. Journal of Wildlife Management 75: 1267–1278.
  71. 71. deMaynadier PG, Hunter ML Jr. (1995) The relationship between forest management and amphibian ecology: a review of the North American literature. Environmental Reviews 3: 230–261.
  72. 72. Sieg AE (2010) Physiological constraints on the ecology of activity-limited ectotherms. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Drexel University.
  73. 73. Blomquist SM, Hunter ML (2007) Externally attached radio-transmitters have limited effects on the antipredator behavior and vagility of Rana pipiens and Rana sylvatica. Journal of Herpetology 41: 430–438.
  74. 74. Harper CA, Guynn DC Jr. (1999) Factors affecting salamander density and distribution within four forest types in the Southern Appalachian Mountains. Forest Ecology and Management 114: 245–252.
  75. 75. Fretwell SD (1972) Populations in a Seasonal Environment. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 224 p.
  76. 76. Berven KA (2009) Density dependence in the terrestrial stage of wood frogs: evidence from a 21-year population study. Copeia 2009: 328–338.
  77. 77. Regosin JV, Windmiller BS, Reed J Michael, Douglas ME (2004) Effects of conspecifics on the burrow occupancy behavior of spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum). Copeia 2004: 152–158.
  78. 78. Patrick DA, Harper EB, Hunter ML, Calhoun AJK (2008) Terrestrial habitat selection and strong density-dependent mortality in recently metamorphosed amphibians. Ecology 89: 2563–2574. pmid:18831177
  79. 79. Watson R, Mathis A, Thompson R (2004) Influence of physical stress, distress cues, and predator kairomones on the. Behavioral Processes 65: 201–209.
  80. 80. Cooperman MD, Reed JM, Romero LM (2004) The effects of terrestrial and breeding densities on corticosterone and testosterone levels in spotted salamanders, Ambystoma maculatum. Canadian Journal of Zoology 82: 1795–1803.
  81. 81. Janin A, Lena J-P, Joly P (2011) Beyond occurrence: body condition and stress hormone as integrative indicators of habitat availability and fragmentation in the common toad. Biological Conservation 144: 1009–1016.
  82. 82. Scott DE, Fore MR (1995) The effect of food limitation on lipid levels, growth, and reproduction in the marbled salamander, Ambystoma opacum. Herpetologica 51: 462–471.
  83. 83. Komoroski MJ, Nagle RD, Congdon JD (1998) Relationships of lipids to ovum size in amphibians. Physiological Zoology 71: 633–641. pmid:9798251
  84. 84. DuShane GP, Hutchinson C (1944) Differences in size and developmental rate between eastern and midwestern embryos of Ambystoma maculatum. Ecology 25: 414–423.
  85. 85. Werner EE (1986) Amphibian metamorphosis: growth rate, predation risk, and the optimal size at transformation. The American Naturalist 128: 319–341.
  86. 86. Scott DE (1994) The effect of larval density on adult demographic traits in Ambystoma opacum. Ecology 75: 1383–1396.
  87. 87. Semlitsch RD (1987) Paedomorphosis in Ambystoma talpoideum: effects of density, food, and pond drying. Ecology 68: 994–1002.
  88. 88. Petranka JW, Smith CK, Scott AF (2004) Identifying the minimal demographic unit for monitoring pond-breeding amphibians. Ecological Applications 14: 1065–1078.
  89. 89. Stevenson RD, Woods WA (2006) Condition indices for conservation: new uses for evolving tools. Integrative and Comparative Biology 46: 1169–1190. pmid:21672816
  90. 90. Homyack JA (2010) Evaluating habitat quality of vertebrates using conservation physiology tools. Wildlife Research 37: 332–342.
  91. 91. Neckel-Oliveira S, Gascon C (2006) Abundance, body size and movement patterns of a tropical treefrog in continuous and fragmented forests in the Brazilian Amazon. Biological Conservation 128: 308–315.
  92. 92. Todd BD, Rothermel BB (2006) Assessing quality of clearcut habitats for amphibians: Effects on abundances versus vital rates in the southern toad (Bufo terrestris). Biological Conservation 133: 178–185.
  93. 93. Baldwin RF, Calhoun AJK, deMaynadier PG (2006) Conservation planning for amphibian species with complex habitat requirements: a case study using movements and habitat selection of the wood frog Rana sylvatica. Journal of Herpetology 40: 442–453.
  94. 94. Shoop CR (1965) Orientation of Ambystoma maculatum: movements to and from breeding ponds. Science 149: 558–559. pmid:17843193
  95. 95. Guerry AD, Hunter ML (2002) Amphibian distributions in a landscape of forests and agriculture: an examination of landscape composition and configuration. Conservation Biology 16: 745–754.
  96. 96. Smith MA, Green DM (2005) Dispersal and the metapopulation paradigm in amphibian ecology and conservation: are all amphibian populations metapopulations? Ecography 28: 110–128.
  97. 97. Faccio SD (2003) Postbreeding emigration and habitat use by Jefferson and spotted salamanders in Vermont. Journal of Herpetology 37: 479–489.
  98. 98. Madison DM (1997) The emigration of radio-implanted spotted salamanders, Ambystoma maculatum. Journal of Herpetology 31: 542–551.
  99. 99. deMaynadier PG, Hunter ML (1998) Effects of silvicultural edges on the distribution and abundance of amphibians in Maine. Conservation Biology 12: 340–352.
  100. 100. Shoop CR (1974) Yearly variation in larval survival of Ambystoma maculatum. Ecology 55: 440–444.
  101. 101. Heatwole H (1961) Habitat selection and activity of the wood frog, Rana sylvatica Le Conte. American Midland Naturalist 66: 301–313.
  102. 102. Enge KM, Marion WR (1986) Effects of clearcutting and site preparation on herpetofauna of a North Florida flatwoods. Forest Ecology and Management 14: 177–192.
  103. 103. Russell KR, Hanlin HG, Wigley TB, Guynn DC Jr. (2002) Responses of isolated wetland herpetofauna to upland forest management. The Journal of Wildlife Management 66: 603–617.
  104. 104. Ducey PK, Ritsema P (1988) Intraspecific aggression and responses to marked substrates in Ambystoma maculatum (Caudata: Ambystomatidae). Copeia 1988: 1008–1013.
  105. 105. Walls SC (1990) Interference competition in postmetamorphic salamanders: interspecific differences in aggression by coexisting species. Ecology 71: 307–314.
  106. 106. Smyers SD, Rubbo MJ, Townsend VR, Swart CC (2002) Intra- and interspecific characterizations of burrow use and defense by juvenile ambystomatid salamanders. Herpetologica 58: 422–429.
  107. 107. Regosin JV, Windmiller BS, Reed JM (2003) Influence of abundance of small-mammal burrows and conspecifics on the density and distribution of spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) in terrestrial habitats. Canadian Journal of Zoology 81: 596–605.
  108. 108. Kaplan RH, Salthe SN (1979) The allometry of reproduction: an empirical view in salamanders. The American Naturalist 113: 671–689.
  109. 109. Berven KA, Gill DE (1983) Interpreting geographic variation in life-history traits. American Zoologist 23: 85–97.
  110. 110. Woodward BD (1982) Local intraspecific variation in clutch parameters in the spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum). Copeia 1982: 157–160.
  111. 111. Howard RD, Kluge AG (1985) Proximate mechanisms of sexual selection in wood frogs. Evolution 39: 260–277.
  112. 112. Berven KA (1981) Mate choice in the wood frog, Rana sylvatica. Evolution 35: 707–722.
  113. 113. Chandler CH, Zamudio KR (2008) Reproductive success by large, closely related males facilitated by sperm storage in an aggregate breeding amphibian. Molecular Ecology 17: 1564–1576. pmid:18179431
  114. 114. Eggert C, Guyetant R (2003) Reproductive behaviour of spadefoot toads (Pelobates fuscus): daily sex ratios and males' tactics, ages, and physical condition. Canadian Journal of Zoology 81: 46–51.
  115. 115. Humfeld SC (2013) Condition-dependent signaling and adoption of mating tactics in an amphibian with energetic displays. Behavioral Ecology 24: 859–870.
  116. 116. Brepson L, Voituron Y, Lengagne T (2013) Condition-dependent ways to manage acoustic signals under energetic constraint in a tree frog. Behavioral Ecology 24: 488–496.
  117. 117. Goater CP, Semlitsch RD, Bernasconi MV (1993) Effects of body size and parasite infection on the locomotory performance of juvenile toads, Bufo bufo. Oikos 66: 129–136.
  118. 118. Bennett AF, Garland T, Else PL (1989) Individual correlation of morphology, muscle mechanics, and locomotion in a salamander. American Journal of Physiology—Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 256: R1200–R1208.
  119. 119. Emerson SB (1978) Allometry and jumping in frogs: helping the twain to meet. Evolution 32: 551–564.
  120. 120. Ponsero A, Joly P (1998) Clutch size, egg survival and migration distance in the agile frog (Rana dalmatina) in a floodplain. Archiv fur Hydrobiologie 142: 343–352.
  121. 121. Scott DE, Casey ED, Donovan MF, Lynch TK (2007) Amphibian lipid levels at metamorphosis correlate to post-metamorphic terrestrial survival. Oecologia 153: 521–532. pmid:17530291
  122. 122. Newman RA, Dunham AE (1994) Size at metamorphosis and water loss in a desert anuran (Scaphiopus couchii). Copeia 1994: 372–381.
  123. 123. Rothermel BB, Semlitsch RD (2006) Consequences of forest fragmentation for juvenile survival in spotted (Ambystoma maculatum) and marbled (Ambystoma opacum) salamanders. Canadian Journal of Zoology 84: 797–807.
  124. 124. Garner TWJ, Rowcliffe JM, Fisher MC (2011) Climate change, chytridiomycosis or condition: an experimental test of amphibian survival. Global Change Biology 17: 667–675.
  125. 125. Bellis ED (1962) The influence of humidity on wood frog activity. American Midland Naturalist 68: 139–148.
  126. 126. Begon M, Harper J, Townsend C (1996) Ecology. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Blackwell Science LTD. xii + 1068 p.
  127. 127. Reading CJ (2007) Linking global warming to amphibian declines through its effects on female body condition and survivorship. Oecologia 151: 125–131. pmid:17024381
  128. 128. Berven KA, Grudzien TA (1990) Dispersal in the wood frog (Rana sylvatica): implications for genetic population-structure. Evolution 44: 2047–2056.
  129. 129. Semlitsch RD, Scott DE, Pechmann JHK (1988) Time and size at metamorphosis related to adult fitness in Ambystoma talpoideum. Ecology 69: 184–192.
  130. 130. Morrison C, Hero J-M (2003) Geographic variation in life-history characteristics of amphibians: a review. Journal of Animal Ecology 72: 270–279.
  131. 131. Church DR, Bailey LL, Wilbur HM, Kendall WL, Hines JE (2007) Iteroparity in the variable environment of the salamander Ambystoma tigrinum. Ecology 88: 891–903. pmid:17536706
  132. 132. Gill DE (1985) Interpreting breeding patterns from census data: a solution to the Husting dilemma. Ecology 66: 344–354.
  133. 133. Taylor BE, Scott DE (1997) Effects of larval density dependence on population dynamics of Ambystoma opacum. Herpetologica 53: 132–145.
  134. 134. Johst K, Brandl R (1997) Body size and extinction risk in a stochastic environment. Oikos 78: 612–617.
  135. 135. Benton TG, Bowler DE (2012) Dispersal in invertebrates: influences on individual decisions. In: Clobert J, Baguette M, Benton TG, Bullock JM, editors. Dispersal Ecology and Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 43–49.
  136. 136. Bonte D, De la Pena E (2009) Evolution of body condition-dependent dispersal in metapopulations. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22: 1242–1251. pmid:19344381
  137. 137. Knox CB (1999) Wood Frog. In: Hunter ML Jr., Calhoun AJK, McCollough M, editors. Maine Amphibians and Reptiles. Orono, Maine: The University of Maine Press. pp. 111–118.
  138. 138. Degraaf RM, Yamasaki M (2001) New England Wildlife: Habitat, Natural History, and Distribution. Hanover, New Hampshire: University Press of New England. 496 p.
  139. 139. Marshall WH, Buell MF (1955) A study of the occurrence of amphibians in relation to a bog succession, Itasca State Park, Minnesota. Ecology 36: 381–387.
  140. 140. Davic RD, Welsh HH Jr. (2004) On the ecological role of salamanders. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 35: 405–434.
  141. 141. Regester KJ, Whiles MR (2006) Decomposition rates of salamander (Ambystoma maculatum) life stages and associated energy and nutrient fluxes in ponds and adjacent forest in Southern Illinois. Copeia 2006: 640–649.
  142. 142. Schriever TA, Cadotte MW, Williams DD (2014) How hydroperiod and species richness affect the balance of resource flows across aquatic-terrestrial habitats. Aquatic Sciences 76: 131–143.
  143. 143. Aubry KB (2000) Amphibians in managed, second-growth Douglas-fir forests. Journal of Wildlife Management 64: 1041–1052.
  144. 144. Corn PS, Bury RB (1989) Logging in western Oregon: responses of headwater habitats and stream amphibians. Forest Ecology and Management 29: 39–57.
  145. 145. Baber MJ, Fleishman E, Babbitt KJ, Tarr TL (2004) The relationship between wetland hydroperiod and nestedness patterns in assemblages of larval amphibians and predatory macroinvertebrates. Oikos 107: 16–27.
  146. 146. Skelly DK, Werner EE, Cortwright SA (1999) Long-term distributional dynamics of a Michigan amphibian assemblage. Ecology 80: 2326–2337.
  147. 147. Urban MC (2004) Disturbance heterogeneity determines freshwater metacommunity structure. Ecology 85: 2971–2978.
  148. 148. De Meester L, Declerck S, Stoks R, Louette G, Van De Meutter F, De Bie T, et al. (2005) Ponds and pools as model systems in conservation biology, ecology and evolutionary biology. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 15: 715–725.
  149. 149. Snodgrass JW, Bryan AL, Burger J (2000) Development of expectations of larval amphibian assemblage structure in southeastern depression wetlands. Ecological Applications 10: 1219–1229.
  150. 150. Scott DE (1990) Effects of larval density in Ambystoma opacum: an experiment in large-scale field enclosures. Ecology 71: 296–306.
  151. 151. Rowe CL, Dunson WA (1995) Impacts of hydroperiod on growth and survival of larval amphibians in temporary ponds of central Pennsylvania, USA. Oecologia 102: 397–403.
  152. 152. Brodman R (1996) Effects of intraguild interactions on fitness and microhabitat use of larval Ambystoma salamanders. Copeia 1996: 372–378.
  153. 153. Taylor BE, Scott DE, Gibbons JW (2006) Catastrophic reproductive failure, terrestrial survival, and persistence of the marbled salamander. Conservation Biology 20: 792–801. pmid:16909572
  154. 154. Semlitsch RD (1987) Relationship of pond drying to the reproductive success of the salamander Ambystoma talpoideum. Copeia 1987: 61–69.
  155. 155. Veysey JS, Mattfeldt SD, Babbitt KJ (2011) Comparative influence of isolation, landscape, and wetland characteristics on egg-mass abundance of two pool-breeding amphibian species. Landscape Ecology 26: 661–672.
  156. 156. Egan RS, Paton PWC (2004) Within-pond parameters affecting oviposition by wood frogs and spotted salamanders. Wetlands 24: 1–13.
  157. 157. Baldwin RF, Calhoun AJK, deMaynadier PG (2006) The significance of hydroperiod and stand maturity for pool-breeding amphibians in forested landscapes. Canadian Journal of Zoology 84: 1604–1615.
  158. 158. MacCracken JG, Stebbings JL (2012) Test of a body condition index with amphibians. Journal of Herpetology 46: 346–350.
  159. 159. Brodeur JC, Suarez RP, Natale GS, Ronco AE, Zaccagnini ME (2011) Reduced body condition and enzymatic alterations in frogs inhabiting intensive crop production areas. Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 74: 1370–1380. pmid:21550114
  160. 160. Gibbons JW, Winne CT, Scott DE, Willson JD, Glaudas X, Andrews KM, et al. (2006) Remarkable amphibian biomass and abundance in an isolated wetland: implications for wetland conservation. Conservation Biology 20: 1457–1465. pmid:17002763
  161. 161. Delgado-Acevedo J, Restrepo C (2008) The contribution of habitat loss to changes in body size, allometry, and bilateral asymmetry in two Eleutherodactylus frogs from Puerto Rico. Conservation Biology 22: 773–782. pmid:18477027
  162. 162. Reading CJ, Clarke RT (1995) The effects of density, rainfall and environmental temperature on body condition and fecundity in the common toad, Bufo bufo. Oecologia 102: 453–459.
  163. 163. Schauble CS (2004) Variation in body size and sexual dimorphism across geographical and environmental space in the frogs Limnodynastes tasmaniensis and L. peronii. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 82: 39–56.
  164. 164. Mazerolle MJ (2001) Amphibian activity, movement patterns, and body size in fragmented peat bogs. Journal of Herpetology 35: 13–20.
  165. 165. Reniers J, Brendonck L, Roberts JD, Verlinden W, Vanschoenwinkel B (2015) Environmental harshness shapes life-history variation in an Australian temporary pool breeding frog: a skeletochronological approach. Oecologia 178: 931–941. pmid:25694040
  166. 166. Burghelea C, Zaharescu D, Palanca A (2013) Phenotypic indicators of developmental instability in an endemic amphibian from an altered landscape (Monegros, NE Spain). Amphibia-Reptilia 34: 505–516.
  167. 167. Popescu VD, Hunter ML Jr. (2011) Clear-cutting affects habitat connectivity for a forest amphibian by decreasing permeability to juvenile movements. Ecological Applications 21: 1283–1295. pmid:21774430
  168. 168. Morris KM, Maret TJ (2007) Effects of timber management on pond-breeding salamanders. Journal of Wildlife Management 71: 1034–1041.
  169. 169. Coster SS, Kovach AI, Babbitt KJ Cooper A (2015) Limited influence of local and landscape factors on finescale gene flow in two pond-breeding amphibians. Molecular Ecology 24: 742–758. pmid:25580642
  170. 170. Coster SS, Kovach AI, Babbitt KJ (2015) High genetic connectivity in wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus) and spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) in a commercial forest. Herpetological Conservation and Biology 10: 64–89.
  171. 171. 1999. Forest Regeneration & Clearcutting Standards. 04–058 C.M.R. ch.20.
  172. 172. Anderson BT, Hayhoe K, Liang XZ (2010) Anthropogenic-induced changes in twenty-first century summertime hydroclimatology of the Northeastern US. Climatic Change 99: 403–423.
  173. 173. Hayhoe K, Wake CP, Huntington TG, Luo LF, Schwartz MD, Sheffield J, et al. (2007) Past and future changes in climate and hydrological indicators in the US Northeast. Climate Dynamics 28: 381–407.
  174. 174. Rodenhouse NL, Christenson LM, Parry D, Green LE (2009) Climate change effects on native fauna of northeastern forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 39: 249–263.
  175. 175. Homan RN, Regosin JV, Rodrigues DM, Reed JM, Windmiller BS, Romero LM (2003) Impacts of varying habitat quality on the physiological stress of spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum). Animal Conservation 6: 11–18.
  176. 176. Madison DM, Farrand L (1998) Habitat use during breeding and emigration in radio-implanted tiger salamanders, Ambystoma tigrinum. Copeia 1998: 402–410.
  177. 177. Windmiller BS (1996) The pond, the forest, and the city: spotted salamander ecology and conservation in a human-dominated landscape. Dissertation, Tufts University.
  178. 178. Bauer DM, Swallow SK (2013) Conserving metapopulations in human-altered landscapes at the urban–rural fringe. Ecological Economics 95: 159–170.
  179. 179. Zanini F, Pellet J, Schmidt BR (2009) The transferability of distribution models across regions: an amphibian case study. Diversity and Distributions 15: 469–480.