2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2012.02452.x
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Life stage specific variation in the occupancy of ponds byLitoria aurea, a threatened amphibian

Abstract: Breeding aggregations are a reproductive strategy to increase mate finding opportunity. However, because aggregations skew the distribution of mature animals through conspecific attraction, rather than resource availability, the distribution of breeding sites may be reduced, so that not all suitable breeding sites are used. To examine the relationship between landscape and reproductive strategies of a threatened frog, Litoria aurea, we studied its distribution at Sydney Olympic Park over two breeding seasons. … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(53 reference statements)
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“…Only in cases where ponds could not be completely dried because of adverse weather was there no conservation benefit for the funds spent on this management action. Although pond draining did not influence the distribution of juvenile frogs, this is likely to be due to the rapid dispersal of bell frogs away from their home ponds soon after metamorphosis, which has been observed at our study site (Bower et al ) and for other bell frog populations (van de Mortel and Goldingay , Goldingay and Lewis ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 45%
“…Only in cases where ponds could not be completely dried because of adverse weather was there no conservation benefit for the funds spent on this management action. Although pond draining did not influence the distribution of juvenile frogs, this is likely to be due to the rapid dispersal of bell frogs away from their home ponds soon after metamorphosis, which has been observed at our study site (Bower et al ) and for other bell frog populations (van de Mortel and Goldingay , Goldingay and Lewis ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 45%
“…Other frog species were recorded when they were seen and a relative abundance index was determined following the methods of Bower et al . ().…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Over time, some of those persisting populations are going extinct, while few, if any remaining ones can be regarded as secure (Mahony et al., ; White & Pyke, ). Coexistence of pathogen and host in remnant populations arguably leads to ongoing demographic instability in those populations (Bower et al., ), and understanding this is complicated by a temporal (seasonal) component to disease expression and impact (Stockwell et al., ), as well as spatial heterogeneity of environmental variables such as salinity that may affect survival and demographic parameters (Stockwell, Clulow, et al., ). Considering that this species has been subject to numerous translocation and reintroduction attempts (Germano et al., ; James, Stockwell, Clulow, Clulow, & Mahony, ; McFadden et al., ), many of which have failed due to the ongoing presence of Bd in the wild (Stockwell et al., ), it is an ideal species to explore the concept of environmental manipulation to mitigate the threat of disease.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%