HOMECOMING OR NEW PAD: HISTORICAL EVIDENCE FOR CALIFORNIA RED-LEGGED FROGS AND OTHER AMPHIBIANS IN THE YOSEMITE REGION, CALIFORNIA

A. Adams, K. Brown, M. Jennings, R. Grasso
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Establishing historical species distributions can assist conservation translocations for threatened species, and yet, ecological changes necessitate developing restoration targets that are not analogous to historical baselines. Despite its recent conservation translocation to Yosemite Valley in Yosemite National Park, Sierra Nevada Mountains, USA, the historical distribution of the federally threatened California Red-legged Frog (Rana draytonii) in the valley remains unclear. Using archival records, interviews, and museum specimens, we examined the historical evidence for California Red-legged Frogs and sympatric amphibian species in the Yosemite region. We found a paucity of reliable amphibian records for Yosemite Valley since the 19th century, one of the most-visited sites in the US National Park System, and conclude that this is the result of historically low collecting and survey effort prior to the introduction of invasive American Bullfrogs (Lithobates catesbeianus; also Rana catesbeiana after Yuan and others 2016) in concert with a bird and mammal study bias from largely diurnal collecting that occurred when California Red-legged Frogs were extant regionally. We found previously undocumented records for individuals of the genus Rana for Yosemite Valley, consistent with a dominant historical hydrology more compatible for Foothill Yellow-legged Frogs (Rana boylii), though none could be definitively identified as California Red-legged Frogs. We conclude that extensive anthropogenic impacts, including acute ecosystem alteration and American Bullfrog introduction, contributed to the failure to detect California Red-legged Frogs in many places regionally once amphibians became a research priority in the latter 20th century. The conservation translocation of California Red-legged Frogs to Yosemite Valley illustrates the integration of historical baselines with contemporary realities, allowing for the complexities of change over time rather than focusing on restoration to an imagined, ideal environment in the past.
归乡或新垫:加州约塞米蒂地区加利福尼亚红腿蛙和其他两栖动物的历史证据
建立历史物种分布有助于濒危物种的保护易位,但生态变化需要制定与历史基线不同的恢复目标。尽管它最近被转移到美国内华达山脉约塞米蒂国家公园的约塞米蒂山谷,但联邦政府威胁的加州红腿蛙(Rana draytonii)在山谷中的历史分布仍不清楚。利用档案记录、访谈和博物馆标本,我们检查了约塞米蒂地区加利福尼亚红腿蛙和同域两栖动物物种的历史证据。我们发现,作为美国国家公园系统中游客最多的景点之一,约塞米蒂山谷自19世纪以来缺乏可靠的两栖动物记录,并得出结论,这是在引入入侵的美国牛蛙(Lithobates catesbeianus;(在Yuan等人2016年之后),与鸟类和哺乳动物的研究偏差相一致,主要是在加利福尼亚红腿蛙存在区域时进行的昼夜收集。我们在约塞米蒂山谷发现了先前未记载的蛙属个体记录,与山脚黄腿蛙(Rana boylii)的主要历史水文相一致,尽管没有一个可以确定为加州红腿蛙。我们的结论是,在20世纪后期,当两栖动物成为研究重点时,广泛的人为影响,包括生态系统的急剧改变和美洲牛蛙的引入,导致了许多地区未能发现加州红腿蛙。加州红腿蛙在约塞米蒂山谷的保护迁移说明了历史基线与当代现实的结合,允许随着时间的推移而变化的复杂性,而不是专注于恢复过去想象中的理想环境。
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