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Climate change affects amphibian breeding, researchers find

If you hear frogs calling and it seems like the wrong time of year, scientists say it may be due to climate change. Researchers from the University of Georgia Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, writing in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, suggest that the breeding periods of several salamander and frog species have shifted over the last thirty years, possibly due to changes in temperature and precipitation patterns.

Many fish-free isolated wetlands are important breeding sites for frogs, and . In the Southeast, some wetlands may have 20 or more species that migrate to the ponds throughout the year, with some species arriving to breed in the fall, followed by others migrating in winter, spring or summer. The SREL scientists discovered that the timing of this migration for four species has changed significantly in recent years, with two of the fall breeders migrating weeks later, and two winter breeding species earlier, than they did at the beginning of the study. Delayed and advanced breeding may be related to warmer fall/ over the years.

Co-author David Scott, a research assistant at the SREL, has helped conduct the research for twenty-seven of the thirty-two-year study. 鈥淭hese data are some of the best in the world for examining how species may respond to a changing climate,鈥 said Scott. 鈥淥bserving that species respond differently is a start toward predicting how environmental change may affect this group of animals in the decades to come. But there is still a great deal we don鈥檛 know about how their habitats might change.鈥

The study was initiated at a wetland called Rainbow Bay on the Department of Energy鈥檚 Savannah River Site, and for many years has been funded by DOE as a reference site to compare to other wetlands that have been altered by construction activity or trace metals. Co-author Whit Gibbons, professor emeritus in the UGA Odum School of Ecology, said, 鈥淭he Rainbow Bay study is especially relevant in having been recognized as the longest running field study on amphibians in the world, with the trapping system having been set up in September 1978 by SREL and checked daily鈥攈olidays, weekends, snow days, you name it鈥 for amphibians since that time.鈥 In addition to serving as a reference site for some of the laboratory鈥檚 ecotoxicology studies, it has proven extremely valuable for understanding the basic ecology of amphibians, according to Gibbons.

鈥淯nderstanding how climate variables affect wildlife is complicated,鈥 said Scott, 鈥渁nd long-term data sets are a must to be able to identify trends.鈥 It is only because of the long-term nature of the study that the researchers could discern the gradual shifts in breeding times, said the authors.

鈥淪ome impacts in nature are abrupt and noticeable, while others are much more subtle鈥攁 species change in habits tends to happen slowly over time,鈥 said Scott.

Co-author Brian Todd, now at the University of California at Davis, notes 鈥淭he rates of change in reproductive timing in our study are among the fastest reported for any ecological events. Our results highlight the sensitivity of amphibians to environmental change and provide cause for concern in the face of continued climate warming.鈥

Provided by University of Georgia

Citation: Climate change affects amphibian breeding, researchers find (2011, January 10) retrieved 14 May 2025 from /news/2011-01-climate-affects-amphibian.html
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