Warming drives cryptic declines of amphibians in eastern Brazil
Raoni Rebouças, Marcileida M. Dos Santos, Ana Glaucia da Silva Martins, Adão Henrique Rosa Domingos, Isaias Santos, Luís Felipe Toledo
ARTIGO
Inglês
Agradecimentos: We thank Richard Griffiths for critical reviews in earlier versions of the manuscript and all volunteers and park rangers involved in the data sampling. This study was supported by Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES - Finance Code 001), São Paulo...
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Agradecimentos: We thank Richard Griffiths for critical reviews in earlier versions of the manuscript and all volunteers and park rangers involved in the data sampling. This study was supported by Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES - Finance Code 001), São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP #2016/25358-3; #2019/18335-5), and the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq #300896/2016-6). We thank IPBio – Instituto de Pesquisas da Biodiversidade staff, the volunteer coordinators, namely Imran Bharat Viroomal and Marleen Hélène Duindam, as well as the volunteers who supported in the field data collection at the Betary Reserve
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Abstract: The global amphibian extinction crisis has challenged scientists around the globe for decades. Robust long-term time-series data to detect such population declines are key to understanding how species respond to climatic variations. Thus, we assessed the species' richness and abundance of...
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Abstract: The global amphibian extinction crisis has challenged scientists around the globe for decades. Robust long-term time-series data to detect such population declines are key to understanding how species respond to climatic variations. Thus, we assessed the species' richness and abundance of an anuran assemblage in the Atlantic Forest in Brazil, where average temperatures were rising over the last 30 years. A series of models were applied to a long time-series of amphibian standardized monitoring (2010–2019) to assess the impact of a combination of a series of local climatic factors, and species life-history traits, to detect any variation on species abundance and richness. We observed a significant reduction in species abundance and a trend of reduction in species richness over time. Temperature had a stronger influence on species abundance and richness compared to precipitation. Furthermore, the most resilient species were generalist and peri-anthropic ones. Although more robust data is needed to pinpoint climate change-related variation on species decline, anticipating amphibian sensitivity to climate shift, and the limited time to act, our results are concerning. We suggest further studies to evaluate other aspects that could be influencing this local population decline and highlights that a broader amphibian monitoring program should be implemented in the Atlantic forest to detect other equally silent gradual declines
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COORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DE PESSOAL DE NÍVEL SUPERIOR - CAPES
001
FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO - FAPESP
2016/25358-3; 2019/18335-5
CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO - CNPQ
300896/2016-6
Fechado
Santos, Raoni Rebouças
Autor
Warming drives cryptic declines of amphibians in eastern Brazil
Raoni Rebouças, Marcileida M. Dos Santos, Ana Glaucia da Silva Martins, Adão Henrique Rosa Domingos, Isaias Santos, Luís Felipe Toledo
Warming drives cryptic declines of amphibians in eastern Brazil
Raoni Rebouças, Marcileida M. Dos Santos, Ana Glaucia da Silva Martins, Adão Henrique Rosa Domingos, Isaias Santos, Luís Felipe Toledo
Fontes
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Biological conservation (Fonte avulsa) |