Distribution of tiger salamanders in northern Sonora, Mexico: comparison of sampling methods and possible implications for an endangered subspecies

IF 1 4区 生物学 Q3 ZOOLOGY Amphibia-Reptilia Pub Date : 2021-11-03 DOI:10.1163/15685381-bja10072
B. Hossack, J. Lemos‐Espinal, Brent H. Sigafus, E. Muths, Gerardo Carreón Arroyo, Daniel Toyos Martinez, David Hurtado Félix, Guillermo Molina Padilla, C. Goldberg, T. R. Jones, M. Sredl, T. Chambert, James C. Rorabaugh
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Many aquatic species in the arid USA-Mexico borderlands region are imperiled, but limited information on distributions and threats often hinders management. To provide information on the distribution of the Western Tiger Salamander (Ambystoma mavortium), including the USA-federally endangered Sonoran Tiger Salamander (Ambystoma mavortium stebbinsi), we used traditional (seines, dip-nets) and modern (environmental DNA [eDNA]) methods to sample 91 waterbodies in northern Sonora, Mexico, during 2015-2018. The endemic Sonoran Tiger Salamander is threatened by introgressive hybridization and potential replacement by another sub-species of the Western Tiger Salamander, the non-native Barred Tiger Salamander (A. m. mavortium). Based on occupancy models that accounted for imperfect detection, eDNA sampling provided a similar detection probability (0.82 [95% CI: 0.56-0.94]) as seining (0.83 [0.46-0.96]) and much higher detection than dip-netting (0.09 [0.02-0.23]). Volume of water filtered had little effect on detection, possibly because turbid sites had greater densities of salamanders. Salamanders were estimated to occur at 51 sites in 3 river drainages in Sonora. These results indicate tiger salamanders are much more widespread in northern Sonora than previously documented, perhaps aided by changes in land and water management practices. However, because the two subspecies of salamanders cannot be reliably distinguished based on morphology or eDNA methods that are based on mitochondrial DNA, we are uncertain if we detected only native genotypes or if we documented recent invasion of the area by the non-native sub-species. Thus, there is an urgent need for methods to reliably distinguish the subspecies so managers can identify appropriate interventions.
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墨西哥索诺拉北部虎螈的分布:采样方法的比较及其对濒危亚种的可能影响
干旱的美墨边境地区的许多水生物种都受到了威胁,但关于分布和威胁的有限信息往往阻碍了管理。为了提供西部虎蝾螈(Ambystoma mavortium)的分布信息,包括美国联邦濒危的索诺兰虎蝾螈,我们在2015-2018年期间使用传统(围网、浸网)和现代(环境DNA[eDNA])方法对墨西哥索诺拉北部的91个水体进行了采样。特有的索诺兰虎蝾螈受到渗入杂交的威胁,并可能被西方虎蝾螈的另一个亚种,非本土的Barred虎蝾螈(A.m.mavortium)取代。基于考虑不完全检测的占用模型,eDNA采样提供了与围网(0.83[0.46-0.96])相似的检测概率(0.82[95%CI:0.56-09]),并且比浸网(0.09[0.02-0.23])高得多的检测率。过滤的水量对检测几乎没有影响,可能是因为浑浊的地方有更大的蝾螈密度。据估计,在索诺拉的3个河流流域的51个地点都有蝾螈。这些结果表明,虎螈在索诺拉州北部的分布比之前记录的要广泛得多,这可能得益于土地和水管理实践的变化。然而,由于蝾螈的两个亚种无法根据形态学或基于线粒体DNA的eDNA方法进行可靠的区分,我们不确定是否只检测到本地基因型,或者是否记录了非本地亚物种最近入侵该地区的情况。因此,迫切需要可靠区分亚种的方法,以便管理者能够确定适当的干预措施。
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来源期刊
Amphibia-Reptilia
Amphibia-Reptilia 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
39
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Amphibia-Reptilia is a leading European multi-disciplinary journal devoted to most of the aspects of herpetology: ecology, behaviour, evolution, conservation, physiology, morphology, paleontology, genetics, and systematics. Amphibia-Reptilia publishes high quality original papers, short-notes, reviews, book reviews and news of the Societas Europaea Herpetologica (SEH). The Societas Europaea Herpteologica (SEH) website is located at: www.seh-herpetology.org.
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