Abstract

Every spring, many of amphibians are killed by motor vehicles on roads. These road-killed animals can be used as valuable material for non-invasive studies showing the effect of environmental pollution on amphibian populations. The aims of our research were to check whether the phalanges of road-killed toads may be useful as material for histological analysis, and whether various degrees of human impact influence the level in bone abnormalities in the common toad. We also examined whether the sex and age structure of toads can differ significantly depending in the different sites. We chose three toad breeding sites where road-killed individuals had been observed: near the centre of a city, the outskirts of a city, and a rural site. We collected dead individuals during spring migration in 2013. The sex of each individual was determined and the toes were used to determine age using the skeletochronology method. While performing age estimates, we looked for abnormalities in relation to normal bone tissue structure. In urban site, females dominate males (sex ratio 2.6:1), but in populations from rural and semi-urban sites, sex ratio was reverse (1:2.2 and 1:1.4, respectively). However, we did not find any significant differences between age structure of all populations (average age of each population: approximately 4 years). We observed abnormalities in more than 80 % of all toads from the city, compared to approximately 20 % from the rural and semi-urban sites. In particular, we found hypertrophic bone cells, misaligned intercellular substance, and irregular outer edges of bones. We suggest that these malformations are caused by different pollution, e.g. with heavy metals.

Highlights

  • Current knowledge widely indicates a direct relationship between anthropogenic pressures and the deteriorating environmental state and/or global extinction of amphibian populations (Blaustein and Johanson 2003; Collins and Storfer 2003; Stuart et al 2005)

  • Lack of juveniles is associated with sampling of the animals during the spring migration to the breeding site, where sexually immature individuals do not appear (Socha and Ogielska 2010)

  • It seems that skeletochronological procedure based on phalanges from killed amphibians during breeding migration is especially useful to age estimation; the effect of road mortality on age structure of amphibians is still unexamined

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Summary

Introduction

Current knowledge widely indicates a direct relationship between anthropogenic pressures and the deteriorating environmental state and/or global extinction of amphibian populations (Blaustein and Johanson 2003; Collins and Storfer 2003; Stuart et al 2005). Impact of pollution on amphibians, encompassing pathology and histological analysis, is usually based on captured living adults. These studies are controversial, raising ethical issues, as they make it necessary to capture and kill adult individuals (Söderman et al 2007; Dmowski et al 2015). This kind of Environ Sci Pollut Res (2016) 23:21940–21946 survey is not as frequent as research on tadpoles or laboratory research. Road-killed toads were used in research on heavy metals absorbed by bone tissues (Simon et al 2009, 2012)

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