4.7 Article

Impacts of road deicing salt on the demography of vernal pool-breeding amphibians

Journal

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 724-734

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/07-1644.1

Keywords

Ambystoma maculatum; amphibian; deicing salt; demography; limitation analysis; Rana sylvatica; road effect zone; spotted salamander; survival; vernal pool; wood frog

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Deicing agents, primarily road salt, are applied to roads in 26 states in the United States and in a number of European countries, yet the scale of impacts of road salt on aquatic organisms remains largely under-studied. The issue is germane to amphibian conservation because both adult and larval amphibians are known to be particularly sensitive to changes in their osmolar environments. In this study, we combined survey, experimental, and demographic modeling approaches to evaluate the possible effects of road salt on two common vernal-pond-breeding amphibian species, the spotted salamander ( Ambystoma maculatum) and the wood frog ( Rana sylvatica). We found that in the Adirondack Mountain Region of New York ( USA), road salt traveled up to 172 m from the highway into wetlands. Surveys showed that egg mass densities of spotted salamanders ( A. maculatum) and wood frogs ( R. sylvatica) were two times higher in forest pools than roadside pools, but this pattern was better explained by road proximity than by increased salinity. Experiments demonstrated that embryonic and larval survival were reduced at moderate ( 500 mu S) and high conductivities ( 3000 mu S) in A. maculatum and at high conductivities in R. sylvatica. Demographic models suggest that such egg and larval stage effects of salt may have important impacts on populations near roads, particularly in the case of A. maculatum, for which salt exposure may lead to local extinction. For both species, the effect of road salt was dependent upon the strength of larval density dependence and declined rapidly with distance from the roadside, with the greatest negative effects being limited to within 50 m. Based on this evidence, we argue that efforts to protect local populations of A. maculatum and R. sylvatica in roadside wetlands should, in part, be aimed at reducing application of road salt near wetlands with high conductivity levels.

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