Abstract

The destruction of freshwater habitat is a major contributor to biodiversity loss in aquatic ecosystems. However, created or restored wetlands could partially mitigate aquatic biodiversity loss by increasing the amount of available habitat across a landscape. We investigated the impact of surrounding terrestrial habitat and water quality variables on suitability for two species of pond-breeding amphibians (bullfrogs [Lithobates catesbeianus] and Blanchard's cricket frogs [Acris blanchardi]) in created permanent wetlands located on an agricultural landscape. We examined tadpole growth and survival in field enclosures placed in ponds surrounded by agricultural, forested, or grassland habitats. We also evaluated the potential for carryover effects of the aquatic environment on terrestrial growth and overwinter survival of cricket frog metamorphs. We found that habitat adjacent to ponds did not predict tadpole growth or survival. Rather, phytoplankton abundance, which showed high variability among ponds within habitat type, was the only predictor of tadpole growth. Cricket frogs emerged larger and earlier from ponds with higher phytoplankton abundance; bullfrogs were also larger and at a more advanced developmental stage in ponds with higher levels of phytoplankton. Overwinter survival of cricket frogs was explained by size at metamorphosis and there were no apparent carryover effects of land use or pond-of-origin on overwinter growth and survival. Our results demonstrate that created ponds in human-dominated landscapes can provide suitable habitat for some anurans, independent of the adjacent terrestrial habitat.

Highlights

  • Habitat destruction is the largest driver of biodiversity loss globally and freshwater ecosystems are among the most threatened [1]

  • There were no effects of habitat type on bullfrog or cricket frog growth and survival (Table 1), and survival of neither species was predicted by water quality metrics

  • After correcting for multiple comparisons, average relative phytoplankton abundance was positively related with cricket frog mass (FDRadjusted P = 0.003) and negatively related to cricket frog time to metamorphosis (FDRadjusted P = 0.009)

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Summary

Introduction

Habitat destruction is the largest driver of biodiversity loss globally and freshwater ecosystems are among the most threatened [1]. Within the continental USA over 50% of wetlands have been lost since 1780, with some midwestern states losing nearly 90% [2]. Overall wetland loss has slowed in the last decade in part because of an increase in created freshwater ponds in agricultural, urban, and grassland habitats [3], which exceeds 2.6 million in number and accounts. The suitability of created ponds in agricultural landscapes for larval anurans

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