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Stable isotope enrichment techniques can aid in understanding dispersal of animals. Pond-breeding amphibians often have spatially disjunct populations that depend on immigration for persistence, yet obtaining direct estimates of dispersal rates among wetlands is challenging. We enriched aquatic mesocosms with 15 N to “mark” amphibian larvae and determine the feasibility of using...
In the southeastern U.S., changes in temperature and precipitation over the last three decades have been the most dramatic in winter and spring seasons. Continuation of these trends could negatively impact pond-breeding amphibians, especially those that rely on winter and spring rains to fill seasonal wetlands, trigger breeding, and ensure reproductive success. From 2009 to 2012, we monitored Spring...
Created ponds were built as an experiment in mitigating the loss of a wetland to construction. We monitored amphibian breeding population sizes and juvenile recruitment at these “created ponds” for 8.5 years and compared the populations to those observed at the original wetland, Sun Bay (≤600 m from the created ponds), and at an undisturbed reference wetland, Rainbow Bay. Some amphibians continued...
The hydrology of a created riparian wetland system was characterized for local and regional conditions. Three methods, two laboratory and onein situ, were used to calculate the hydraulic conductivity of the wetland substrate. Hydraulic conductivity values and measured vertical gradients were used to estimate seepage loss to ground water. Surface-water inflow and outflow dominated the hydrologic budget...
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