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

Effects of Habitat Alterations on Bog Turtles (Glyptemys muhlenbergii): A Comparison of Two Populations

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Page Range: 455 – 460
DOI: 10.1670/12-250
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Abstract

Bog Turtles (Glyptemys muhlenbergii) are imperiled by habitat loss and degradation; yet, population responses to habitat management and restoration efforts have not been well documented because of the difficulties of studying this long-lived species. We compared Bog Turtle population demography and habitat use from 1994 to 2009 at two sites in Massachusetts, USA: one site was managed for nonnative invasive species and natural succession (Site 1), and the other site was flooded from American Beaver (Castor canadensis) activity resulting in an expansion of nonnative invasive plants (Site 2). A mark–recapture study involving 90 individual turtles indicated that survival rates and population sizes remained stable before and after habitat management at Site 1 where the extent of high suitable habitat remained the same, whereas population size and survival rates declined at Site 2 where the extent of low suitable habitat increased. Together, these results suggest that habitat management and restoration efforts can improve or maintain the status of Bog Turtle populations. This study supports the value of properly planned and enacted habitat management actions for this federally threatened and state endangered species.

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

Horvitz–Thompson estimates of adult Bog Turtle population size (95% confidence interval) for two sites (Site 1, n = 44 and Site 2, n = 46) in Massachusetts, USA. Estimates for 1997 were derived from data pooled from 1997, and 1998 and 2006 estimates were derived from data from 2005 through 2007. Estimates were calculated from a Cormack–Jolly–Seber model that specified capture probabilities equal in all years and survival probabilities varying for the two time periods, before (1995–1997) and after (2006–2009) habitat alterations.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 2. 
Fig . 2. 

Average percentage of habitat categories within 25 randomly placed average-sized (0.80-ha) adult home ranges at two Bog Turtle sites in Massachusetts, USA. No habitat types within Site 1 fell into the category of low suitability. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals.


Contributor Notes

Corresponding Author. Present address: The Nature Conservancy, Western Massachusetts Program, Great Barrington, Massachusetts 01230 USA; E-mail: asirois@tnc.org
Mid-Atlantic Center for Herpetology and Conservation, Olney, Pennsylvania 19120 USA.
Accepted: 09 Dec 2013
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