Middle of the road: enhanced habitat for salamanders on unused logging roads
David L. LeGros A C D , Brad Steinberg B and David Lesbarrères CA Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, Algonquin Provincial Park, PO Box 219, Whitney, Ontario K0J 2M0, Canada.
B Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, 300 Water St. Peterborough, Ontario, 6th Floor K9J 8M, Canada.
C Laurentian University, 935 Ramsey Lake Road, Sudbury, Ontario, P3E 2C6, Canada.
D Corresponding author. Email: david.legros@ontario.ca
Wildlife Research 44(1) 1-8 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR14239
Submitted: 22 November 2014 Accepted: 27 November 2016 Published: 7 March 2017
Abstract
Context: Amphibians are particularly susceptible to the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation. The construction and use of roads is among the most common sources of habitat fragmentation and can lead to serious population declines. Unused resource access roads, such as those formerly used for logging, can still negatively impact salamanders and reduce habitat quality through edge effects. Unfortunately, habitat rehabilitation and enhancement is rarely attempted on unused forest roads.
Aims: Our aim was to elaborate on a previous study that tested several types of woody debris to mitigate the negative impacts of forest roads by creating a novel habitat on an unused forest road in Algonquin Provincial Park. Here we focus solely on the use of large, squared timbers and their use by salamanders.
Methods: We tested the application of coarse woody debris (CWD) to the surface of an unused forest road. CWD were sampled for salamanders seven times during the 2011 field season. Local climatic variables were tested against salamander captures, and CWD size preferences and patterns of salamander aggregation under CWD were assessed.
Key results: We observed five salamander species and 415 individuals under timbers in the 2011 field season. Larger timbers (>1 m3) were preferred by all species observed and a significant proportion of animals were found in groups of two or more under larger timbers. High ambient temperature and low relative humidity negatively affected the number and species composition observed under timbers, suggesting that the efficiency of CWD as a survey method and enhanced habitat is season dependent.
Implications: Large timbers placed on unused forest roads may provide suitable refuges for migrating or dispersing forest salamanders while they attempt to cross the road. The tendency of salamanders to aggregate under CWD allows individual red efts to reduce water loss; however, red-backed salamanders are territorial and may drive off conspecifics. The use of large CWD may be an effective and low-cost method to rehabilitate unused forest roads and can be used to promote habitat connectivity for salamanders in targeted habitats, such as near wetlands, or for other species of concern.
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