Abstract
Changes in behavior are often the proximate response of animals to human disturbance, with variability in tolerance levels leading some species to exhibit striking shifts in life history, fitness, and/or survival. Thus, elucidating the effects of disturbance on animal behavior, and how this varies among taxonomically similar species with inherently different behaviors and life histories is of value for management and conservation. We evaluated the risk response of three anuran species—southern leopard frog (Lithobates sphenocephalus), Blanchard’s cricket frog (Acris blanchardi), and green tree frog (Hyla cinerea)—to determine how differences in microhabitat use (arboreal vs ground-dwelling) and body size (small vs medium) may play a role in response to a potential threat within a human-altered subtropical forest. Each species responded to risk with both flight and freeze behaviors, however, behaviors were species- and context-specific. As distance to cover increased, southern leopard frogs increased freezing behavior, green tree frogs decreased freezing behavior, and Blanchard’s cricket frogs increased flight response. The propensity of green tree frogs to use the canopy of vegetation as refugia, and the small body size of Blanchard’s cricket frogs likely led to greater flight response as distance to cover increased, whereas innate reliance on camouflage among southern leopard frogs may place them at greater risk to landscaping, agricultural, and transportation practices in open terrain. As such, arboreal and small-bodied species may inherently be better suited in human altered-landscapes compared to larger, ground-dwelling species. As land-use change continues to modify habitats, understanding how species respond to changes in their environment continues to be of importance, particularly in ecosystems where human-wildlife interactions are expected to increase in frequency.
Highlights
Natural and anthropogenic disturbances continue to alter populations across terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems (Abatzoglou & Williams, 2016; Hughes et al, 2017; Pecl et al, 2017)
We investigate the response of three anuran species with different body sizes, levels of mobility, and microhabitat use patterns—southern leopard frog (Lithobates sphenocephalus), Blanchard’s cricket frog (Acris blanchardi), and green tree frog (Hyla cinerea)—to perceived risk at altered edge habitats in a subtropical forest, in order to improve our understanding of the effects of habitat alterations on amphibian response to perturbation
From June to November 2017, 639 southern leopard frogs, 247 Blanchard’s cricket frogs, and 1,800 green tree frogs were encountered during 24 nights of sampling across four belt transects (n = 96 total; Table 1)
Summary
Natural and anthropogenic disturbances continue to alter populations across terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems (Abatzoglou & Williams, 2016; Hughes et al, 2017; Pecl et al, 2017). Often as a first response to perturbation, changes in behavior. Habitat and dietary generalists are inherently more adept at responding to disturbance (Devictor, Julliard & Jiguet, 2008; Hamer & McDonnell, 2008; Clavel, Julliard & Devictor, 2011), species vary due to interspecific variability in morphology, physiology, and innate behavioral characteristics, regardless of being a specialist or generalist (McKinney, 2006; Battisti, Poeta & Fanelli, 2016; Legrand et al, 2017). As such, understanding how perturbations lead to changes in behavior, and how this may vary across taxonomic groups is important for developing a robust ecological paradigm for disturbance ecology (Caruso et al, 2016; Lany et al, 2017; Liu et al, 2017)
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