Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada

Distribution, abundance, and habitat relationships of anurans that inhabit subarctic regions are poorly understood, and anuran monitoring protocols developed for temperate regions may not be applicable across large roadless areas of northern landscapes. In addition, arctic and subarctic regions of N...

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Main Authors: Reiter, Matthew E, Boal, Clint W, Andersen, David E
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183608
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spelling ftunivminnesdc:oai:conservancy.umn.edu:11299/183608 2023-05-15T15:08:46+02:00 Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada Reiter, Matthew E Boal, Clint W Andersen, David E 2006 http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183608 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183608 Report 2006 ftunivminnesdc 2020-02-02T14:52:14Z Distribution, abundance, and habitat relationships of anurans that inhabit subarctic regions are poorly understood, and anuran monitoring protocols developed for temperate regions may not be applicable across large roadless areas of northern landscapes. In addition, arctic and subarctic regions of North America are predicted to experience changes in climate and, in some areas, recently have experienced habitat alteration due to high rates of herbivory by breeding and migrating waterfowl. To better understand subarctic anuran abundance, distribution, and habitat associations, we conducted anuran calling surveys in the Cape Churchill region of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba in 2004 and 2005. We conducted surveys along ~1-km transects distributed across 3 landscape types (coastal tundra, interior sedge meadow/ tundra, and boreal forest/ tundra interface) and estimated the probability of detection and density of Boreal Chorus Frogs (Pseudacris maculata) and Wood Frogs (Rana sylvatica). We detected a Wood Frog or Boreal Chorus Frog on 22 (87%) of 26 transects surveyed, and probability of detection varied between years and species and among landscape types. Estimated density of both species increased from the coastal zone inland toward the boreal forest edge. Our results suggest that anurans occur across a wide range of habitats in this subarctic tundra landscape, that there are spatial patterns in anuran abundance, and that considerations for both spatial and temporal variation need to be incorporated into surveys for subarctic anurans. Report Arctic Cape Churchill Churchill Subarctic Tundra Wapusk national park University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy Arctic Canada Cape Churchill ENVELOPE(-93.218,-93.218,58.763,58.763)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy
op_collection_id ftunivminnesdc
language English
description Distribution, abundance, and habitat relationships of anurans that inhabit subarctic regions are poorly understood, and anuran monitoring protocols developed for temperate regions may not be applicable across large roadless areas of northern landscapes. In addition, arctic and subarctic regions of North America are predicted to experience changes in climate and, in some areas, recently have experienced habitat alteration due to high rates of herbivory by breeding and migrating waterfowl. To better understand subarctic anuran abundance, distribution, and habitat associations, we conducted anuran calling surveys in the Cape Churchill region of Wapusk National Park, Manitoba in 2004 and 2005. We conducted surveys along ~1-km transects distributed across 3 landscape types (coastal tundra, interior sedge meadow/ tundra, and boreal forest/ tundra interface) and estimated the probability of detection and density of Boreal Chorus Frogs (Pseudacris maculata) and Wood Frogs (Rana sylvatica). We detected a Wood Frog or Boreal Chorus Frog on 22 (87%) of 26 transects surveyed, and probability of detection varied between years and species and among landscape types. Estimated density of both species increased from the coastal zone inland toward the boreal forest edge. Our results suggest that anurans occur across a wide range of habitats in this subarctic tundra landscape, that there are spatial patterns in anuran abundance, and that considerations for both spatial and temporal variation need to be incorporated into surveys for subarctic anurans.
format Report
author Reiter, Matthew E
Boal, Clint W
Andersen, David E
spellingShingle Reiter, Matthew E
Boal, Clint W
Andersen, David E
Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
author_facet Reiter, Matthew E
Boal, Clint W
Andersen, David E
author_sort Reiter, Matthew E
title Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
title_short Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
title_full Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
title_fullStr Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Species Composition, Distribution, and Habitat Associations of Anurans in a Subarctic Tundra Landscape Near Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
title_sort species composition, distribution, and habitat associations of anurans in a subarctic tundra landscape near cape churchill, manitoba, canada
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183608
long_lat ENVELOPE(-93.218,-93.218,58.763,58.763)
geographic Arctic
Canada
Cape Churchill
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Cape Churchill
genre Arctic
Cape Churchill
Churchill
Subarctic
Tundra
Wapusk national park
genre_facet Arctic
Cape Churchill
Churchill
Subarctic
Tundra
Wapusk national park
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183608
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