Abstract

Dispersal forms are an important component of the ecology of many animals, and reach particular importance for predicting ranges of invasive species. African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) move overland between water bodies, but all empirical studies are from invasive populations with none from their native southern Africa. Here we report on incidents of overland movement found through a capture-recapture study carried out over a three year period in Overstrand, South Africa. The maximum distance moved was 2.4 km with most of the 91 animals, representing 5% of the population, moving ∼150 m. We found no differences in distances moved by males and females, despite the former being smaller. Fewer males moved overland, but this was no different from the sex bias found in the population. In laboratory performance trials, we found that males outperformed females, in both distance moved and time to exhaustion, when corrected for size. Overland movement occurred throughout the year, but reached peaks in spring and early summer when temporary water bodies were drying. Despite permanent impoundments being located within the study area, we found no evidence for migrations of animals between temporary and permanent water bodies. Our study provides the first dispersal kernel for X. laevis and suggests that it is similar to many non-pipid anurans with respect to dispersal.

Highlights

  • The ability to disperse is present in most organisms (Clobert et al, 2009) and is one of their most important characteristics (Bonte & Dahirel, 2017)

  • We found significant differences between the sizes of male and female X. laevis within the small subset (n = 20) which we tested for performance (F1,18 = 10.4; P = 0.0047)

  • We found that 5% of X. laevis moved between water bodies within an area of 3 km2, with examples of animals moving nearly the full length of the study site

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The ability to disperse is present in most organisms (Clobert et al, 2009) and is one of their most important characteristics (Bonte & Dahirel, 2017). Dispersal entails the individual movement between habitat patches, and as such affects individual traits, and population characteristics, such as community structure (Bowler & Benton, 2005; Doebeli, 1995; Holt, 1985; Matthysen, 2005). This is important for invasive species (Travis et al, 2009) where dispersal is a key characteristic. The use of dispersal kernels in models of invasion help inform managers of potential invasive spread (e.g., Vimercati et al, 2017b; Vimercati et al, 2017a)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call