Predicting spring migration of two European amphibian species with plant phenology using citizen science data

被引:0
|
作者
Maria Peer
Daniel Dörler
Johann G. Zaller
Helfried Scheifinger
Silke Schweiger
Gregor Laaha
Gernot Neuwirth
Thomas Hübner
Florian Heigl
机构
[1] University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences,Institute of Zoology
[2] Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik,First Zoological Department, Herpetological Collection
[3] Natural History Museum Vienna,Institute of Statistics
[4] University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences,undefined
[5] Naturschutzbund Österreich,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Habitat fragmentation is one of the drivers for amphibian population declines globally. Especially in industrialized countries roads disrupt the seasonal migration of amphibians between hibernation and reproduction sites, often ending in roadkills. Thus, a timely installing of temporary mitigation measures is important for amphibian conservation. We wanted to find out if plant phenology can be a proxy in advance to determine the start of amphibian migration, since both phenomena are triggered by temperature. We analysed data of 3751 amphibian and 7818 plant phenology observations from citizen science projects in Austria between 2000 and 2018. Using robust regression modelling we compared the migration of common toads (Bufo bufo) and common frogs (Rana temporaria) with the phenology of five tree, one shrub, and one herb species. Results showed close associations between the migration of common frogs and phenological phases of European larch, goat willow and apricot. Models based on goat willow predict migration of common frog to occur 21 days after flowering, when flowering was observed on 60th day of year; apricot based models predict migration to occur 1 day after flowering, observed on the 75th day of year. Common toads showed weaker associations with plant phenology than common frogs. Our findings suggest that plant phenology can be used to determine the onset of temporary mitigation measures for certain amphibian species to prevent roadkills.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Predicting spring migration of two European amphibian species with plant phenology using citizen science data
    Peer, Maria
    Doerler, Daniel
    Zaller, Johann G.
    Scheifinger, Helfried
    Schweiger, Silke
    Laaha, Gregor
    Neuwirth, Gernot
    Huebner, Thomas
    Heigl, Florian
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2021, 11 (01)
  • [2] Spring migration distances of some Central European amphibian species
    Kovar, Roman
    Brabec, Marek
    Vita, Radovan
    Bocek, Radomir
    AMPHIBIA-REPTILIA, 2009, 30 (03) : 367 - 378
  • [3] A spatio-temporal comparison of avian migration phenology using Citizen Science data
    Arab, Ali
    Courter, Jason R.
    Zelt, Jessica
    SPATIAL STATISTICS, 2016, 18 : 234 - 245
  • [4] Using citizen science to build baseline data on tropical tree phenology
    Ramaswami, Geetha
    Sidhu, Swati
    Quader, Suhel
    CURRENT SCIENCE, 2021, 121 (11): : 1409 - 1416
  • [5] Using citizen science in road surveys for large-scale amphibian monitoring: are biased data representative for species distribution?
    Petrovan, Silviu O.
    Vale, Candida Gomes
    Sillero, Neftali
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2020, 29 (06) : 1767 - 1781
  • [6] Using citizen science in road surveys for large-scale amphibian monitoring: are biased data representative for species distribution?
    Silviu O. Petrovan
    Cândida Gomes Vale
    Neftalí Sillero
    Biodiversity and Conservation, 2020, 29 : 1767 - 1781
  • [7] Intraspecific consistency and geographic variability in temporal trends of spring migration phenology among European bird species
    Rubolini, Diego
    Moller, Anders P.
    Rainio, Kalle
    Lehikoinen, Esa
    CLIMATE RESEARCH, 2007, 35 (1-2) : 135 - 146
  • [8] Using citizen science data to compare flight phenology of two oligolectic bees (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae) with the flowering of their host plants
    Milberg, Per
    Palm, Anna
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY, 2024, 121 : 67 - 72
  • [9] Validating Herbarium-Based Phenology Models Using Citizen-Science Data
    Spellman, Katie V.
    Mulder, Christa P. H.
    BIOSCIENCE, 2016, 66 (10) : 897 - 906
  • [10] Lessons from citizen science: Assessing volunteer-collected plant phenology data with Mountain Watch
    MacKenzie, Caitlin McDonough
    Murray, Georgia
    Primack, Richard
    Weihrauch, Doug
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2017, 208 : 121 - 126