Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 15 May 2019

Thermal Preference and Species Range in Mountaintop Salamanders and Their Widespread Competitors

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Page Range: 96 – 103
DOI: 10.1670/18-110
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Abstract

Temperature tolerance can be a critical factor in determining amphibian species range over both latitudinal and elevational gradients; however, range limits across latitudes and elevations are not always congruent. For some mountaintop endemic and widespread salamanders in the Southern Appalachians, elevational distributions suggest the hypothesis that mountaintop species should be more cold tolerant, whereas latitudinal patterns are consistent with the hypothesis that widespread species should be more cold tolerant or tolerate a wider range of temperatures. We tested these hypotheses with year-round surveys of two mountaintop endemic species, Big Levels salamanders (Plethodon sherando) and Peaks of Otter salamanders (Plethodon hubrichti), at high- and low-elevation sites where they overlap with the widespread Eastern Redback salamander (Plethodon cinereus). We fit hierarchical Bayesian models to salamander surface counts across natural variation in soil temperature and moisture to compare temperatures that maximized surface counts (“peak activity temperature”) and the range of temperatures at which each species was active (“activity window”). We found that P. sherando and P. cinereus showed similar peak activity temperatures in areas of overlap, though P. sherando had a wider activity window as compared to P. cinereus. For P. hubrichti, we found a similar to somewhat higher peak activity temperature compared to P. cinereus, though P. cinereus had a wider activity window. We found no consistent differences in responses to soil moisture across species pairs. Our results suggest that elevational zonation in salamanders can result from a variety of processes and may not always reflect differences in relative temperature preferences.

Copyright: Copyright 2019 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles 2019
Fig. 1
Fig. 1

Map of study sites in Virginia, USA. Two low-elevation and two high-elevation Big Levels sites are close together and appear as a single circle. For both Peaks of Otter sites, a single plot contained both the endemic and the widespread species.


Fig. 2
Fig. 2

Adult salamander counts modeled as a quadratic function of temperature for data from both high- and low-elevation plots. “BL” refers to Big Levels Salamanders (Plethodon sherando), and “RB” refers to Eastern Redback Salamanders (Plethodon cinereus). Counts are shown on a log scale.


Fig. 3
Fig. 3

Adult salamander counts relative to temperature using a LOESS smoother. “BL” refers to Big Levels salamanders (Plethodon sherando) and “RB” refers to Eastern Redback Salamanders (Plethodon cinereus).


Fig. 4
Fig. 4

Adult salamander counts modeled as a quadratic function of temperature for data from both high- and low-elevation plots. “PO” refers to Peaks of Otter Salamanders (Plethodon hubrichti) and “RB” refers to Eastern Redback Salamanders (Plethodon cinereus). Counts are shown on a log scale.


Fig. 5
Fig. 5

Adult salamander counts relative to temperature with the use of a LOESS smoother. “PO” refers to Peaks of Otter Salamanders (Plethodon sherando) and “RB” refers to Eastern Redback Salamanders (Plethodon cinereus).


Contributor Notes

Corresponding Author. E-mail: marshd@wlu.edu
Accepted: 12 Jan 2019
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