Editorial Type:
Article Category: Other
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Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 2014

Decline of the Cheat Mountain Salamander over a 32-Year Period and the Potential Influence of Competition from a Sympatric Species

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Page Range: 415 – 422
DOI: 10.1670/13-002
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Abstract

We evaluated trends in occupancy of the Cheat Mountain Salamander (Plethodon nettingi) over a 32-yr period and examined the potential influence of competition by sympatric salamander species on these changes. We conducted surveys at 36 locations along four transects on an elevational gradient in the Appalachian Mountains geographic province of West Virginia, USA. We used occupancy modeling to examine patterns in species distributions for three focal species: P. nettingi, a federally threatened species, the Eastern Red-Backed Salamander (Plethodon cinereus), and the Allegheny Mountain Dusky Salamander (Desmognathus ochrophaeus). The probability of occupancy for P. nettingi was considerably lower in 2011 compared to 1978–79 at medium and high elevations (1,169–1,378 m). Additionally, occupancy of P. nettingi was associated negatively with P. cinereus at the highest elevations. These data suggest that these P. nettingi populations have declined and P. cinereus have possibly expanded their vertical distribution. Thus, P. cinereus may be negatively affecting mid- and high-elevation populations of P. nettingi. Alternatively, environmental changes (e.g., habitat disturbance and altered weather patterns) may have contributed to declines of P. nettingi at mid- and high-elevation sites, facilitated by colonization by P. cinereus. Due to the endemic and federally threatened status of P. nettingi, conservation efforts to avoid fragmentation of P. nettingi habitat should be maintained and possibly enhanced, as ecological impacts of environmental changes can be exacerbated in high-elevation habitats.

Copyright: 2014
<sc>Fig</sc>
. 1. 
Fig . 1. 

The range of Plethodon nettingi and the location of the four study sites in the Monongahela National Forest, West Virginia, USA.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 2. 
Fig . 2. 

Occupancy probabilities (Ψ ± 85% CI) of Plethodon nettingi in relation to elevation during two separate periods at sites in the Monongahela National Forest of West Virginia, USA. The curves were fit by predicting occupancy at regularly spaced intervals of elevation.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 3. 
Fig . 3. 

Change in occupancy rates (ΔΨ ± 85% CI) of Plethodon cinereus and Desmognathus ochrophaeus in relation to elevation between 1978-1979 and 2011 at sites in the Monongahela National Forest of West Virginia, USA. The curves were fit by predicting change in occupancy at regularly spaced intervals of elevation.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 4. 
Fig . 4. 

The relationship between the changes in occupancy (± 85% CI) of Plethodon nettingi and Plethodon cinereus at minimum, maximum, and mean elevations (i.e., 1,109 to 1,378 m) between 1978–79 and 2011. The curves were fit by predicting change of Plethodon nettingi occupancy at regularly spaced intervals of changes in the occupancy of Plethodon cinereus.


Contributor Notes

Corresponding Author. Email: kroschel@marshall.edu
Accepted: 15 Dec 2013
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