The Mesoamerican giant toad (Rhinella horribilis) as bioindicator of vegetation degradation in a tropical forest

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Basic and Applied Herpetology Pub Date : 2024-06-12 DOI:10.11160/bah.273
Carmen Duque Amado, Rodrigo Megía-Palma
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Abstract

Identifying species that can serve as bioindicators of environmental quality is essential for monitoring the anthropogenic impact. Common and widespread species can be ideal bioindicators due to their abundance and easy monitoring, but a confirmation of their differential responses as a function of habitat perturbation is needed. Because amphibians are known as good bioindicators of environmental perturbation, we conducted this work to identify whether a common, generalist amphibian species, the Mesoamerican giant toad (Rhinella horribilis), could serve as a bioindicator of environmental degradation in a tropical forest. We sampled toads in two areas of tropical forest that differed in anthropogenic degradation (primary vs. secondary forest), establishing in each of these areas two sections of the same surface area but differing in substrate (grass vs. sand). We analyzed toad abundance, sex ratio, body length and condition, and the amount and distribution across the body of ectoparasites (ticks). We analyzed 59 toads that were infested with 503 ticks. Based on a multi-model inference approach, the results suggested that toads were more abundant and had lower body condition in the secondary than in the primary forest. In the secondary forest, females were proportionally less abundant than males. The tick loads responded to an interaction of the body area with either the forest type or the substrate, with increased occurrence of ticks in toads from secondary forests and from grass sections. The differences found between the primary and secondary forests in sex ratio, toad abundance, body condition, and tick load across body regions are consistent with previous studies in other less common species of amphibians and thus posit R. horribilis as a good bioindicator of anthropic disturbance in this tropical forest.
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中美洲大蟾蜍(Rhinella horribilis)作为热带森林植被退化的生物指标
确定可作为环境质量生物指标的物种对于监测人为影响至关重要。常见和广泛分布的物种由于数量多且易于监测,可以成为理想的生物指标,但需要确认它们对生境扰动的不同反应。众所周知,两栖动物是环境扰动的良好生物指标,因此我们开展了这项工作,以确定中美洲大蟾蜍(Rhinella horribilis)这一常见的两栖类综合物种是否可以作为热带森林环境退化的生物指标。我们在人为退化程度不同的两个热带森林地区(原始森林与次生林)采集了蟾蜍样本,在每个地区建立了两个面积相同但基质不同的区域(草地与沙地)。我们分析了蟾蜍的丰度、性别比例、体长和状态,以及体外寄生虫(蜱)的数量和分布。我们分析了59只被503只蜱虫侵扰的蟾蜍。根据多模型推断法,结果表明次生林中的蟾蜍数量比原始森林中的多,身体状况比原始森林中的低。在次生林中,雌性蟾蜍的数量比例低于雄性。蜱载量与蟾蜍身体面积和森林类型或基质的相互作用有关,次生林和草地蟾蜍的蜱发生率增加。原始森林和次生林在性别比例、蟾蜍丰度、身体状况和蜱载量等方面的差异与之前对其他不常见两栖动物物种的研究结果一致,因此认为蟾蜍是该热带森林中人类干扰的一个很好的生物指标。
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来源期刊
Basic and Applied Herpetology
Basic and Applied Herpetology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Basic and Applied Herpetology (B&AH) is the open access scientific journal of the Spanish (AHE) and Portuguese (APH) Herpetological Societies. B&AH publishes original Research Papers and updated Reviews about especially interesting issues dealing with any aspect of amphibians and reptiles worldwide. Authors can also submit Short Notes if these are organized around hypotheses appropriately argued and analysed quantitatively.
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