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Synergistic effects of the invasive Chinese tallow (Triadica sebifera) and climate change on aquatic amphibian survival. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate change and invasive species, particularly the Chinese tallow tree, pose significant threats to amphibian survival, yet their interactions remain understudied.
  • Our research investigated how the timing of leaf fall from Chinese tallow and amphibian breeding influenced the survival of amphibian larvae in controlled aquatic environments.
  • Results showed that warmer winters led to lower larval survival due to reduced oxygen levels caused by early decomposition of leaf litter, highlighting a concerning interaction between climate change and invasive species that could further endanger amphibians.

Article Abstract

Changes in climate and the introduction of invasive species are two major stressors to amphibians, although little is known about the interaction between these two factors with regard to impacts on amphibians. We focused our study on an invasive tree species, the Chinese tallow (Triadica sebifera), that annually sheds its leaves and produces leaf litter that is known to negatively impact aquatic amphibian survival. The purpose of our research was to determine whether the timing of leaf fall from Chinese tallow and the timing of amphibian breeding (determined by weather) influence survival of amphibian larvae. We simulated a range of winter weather scenarios, ranging from cold to warm, by altering the relative timing of when leaf litter and amphibian larvae were introduced into aquatic mesocosms. Our results indicate that amphibian larvae survival was greatly affected by the length of time Chinese tallow leaf litter decomposes in water prior to the introduction of the larvae. Larvae in treatments simulating warm winters (early amphibian breeding) were introduced to the mesocosms early in the aquatic decomposition process of the leaf litter and had significantly lower survival compared with cold winters (late amphibian breeding), likely due to significantly lower dissolved oxygen levels. Shifts to earlier breeding phenology, linked to warming climate, have already been observed in many amphibian taxa, and with most climate models predicting a significant warming trend over the next century, the trend toward earlier breeding should continue if not increase. Our results strongly suggest that a warming climate can interact with the effects of invasive plant species, in ways we have not previously considered, to reduce the survival of an already declining group of organisms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3867914PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.857DOI Listing

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