| Literature DB >> 29404203 |
Nancy E Karraker1, Samantha Fischer2, Anchalee Aowphol3, Jennifer Sheridan4, Sinlan Poo5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lowland areas in tropical East and Southeast Asia have a long history of conversion from forestland to agricultural land, with many remaining forests being chronically degraded by wood cutting, livestock grazing, and burning. Wetland-breeding amphibians that have evolved in lowland forests in the region have adjusted to changes in habitat composition caused by humans' activities, and populations continue to persist. However, we have little understanding of the impacts of forest disturbance on these species beyond assessments of abundance and distribution, and species considered to be common and widespread have been largely neglected.Entities:
Keywords: Amphibians; Body condition; Demography; Duttaphrynus; Hong Kong; Microhyla; Polypedates; Predation risk; Survival; Thailand
Year: 2018 PMID: 29404203 PMCID: PMC5797445 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Body condition of Asian common toads (Duttaphrynus melanostictus).
Toads were measured in agricultural land, degraded forest, and intact forest in (A) Thailand and (B) Hong Kong, and body condition was calculated as a relationship between body mass and length. Positive values indicate good body condition and negative values indicate poor body condition. We captured too few individuals (n = 4) in agricultural land in Thailand to include in analyses. Error bars indicate standard error.
Figure 2Embryonic and larval survival of Microhyla heymonsi and M. fissipes.
(A) Survival of embryos to hatching and (B) survival of larvae to just prior to metamorphosis assessed in experiments conducted in agricultural land, and degraded and intact forests in Thailand and Hong Kong. Error bars indicate standard error.
Figure 3Embryonic survival of Polypedates leucomystax and P. megacephalus.
Survival of embryos in egg masses that were accessible (unscreened) or inaccessible (screened) to predatory flies in the genus Caiusa quantified in experiments conducted in (A) Thailand and (B) Hong Kong. Error bars indicate standard error.