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Library Anuran road-kills neighboring a peri-urban reserve in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

Anuran road-kills neighboring a peri-urban reserve in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

Anuran road-kills neighboring a peri-urban reserve in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

Resource information

Date of publication
december 2012
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201500015281
Pages
17-26

Mortality from road-kills may figure among the important causes of decline in amphibian populations and species extinctions worldwide. Evaluation of the magnitude, composition, and temporal and spatial distributions of amphibian road-kills is a key step for mitigation planning, especially in peri-urban reserves. Once a month for 16 months, we surveyed, on foot, a 4.4 km section of state road ERS-389 bordering the Itapeva reserve in the southern Atlantic Forest. We recorded 1433 anuran road-kills and estimated a mortality rate of 9002 road-kills/km/year. The species most often recorded were the largest ones: Leptodactylus latrans, Rhinella icterica, Leptodactylus gracilis and Hypsiboas faber; 54.5% of the carcasses could not be identified. Anuran mortality was concentrated in summer, and was associated with temperature, rainfall and photoperiod. Leptodactylus road-kills were strongly influenced by vehicle traffic, probably because of its high abundance during the entire study period. Road-kill hotspots differed for anurans as a group and for single species, and we found an association among spatial patterns of mortality and types of land cover, distance from the nearest waterbody, roadside ditches, and artificial light. Traffic should be banned temporarily during periods of high mortality, which can be forecasted based on meteorological data. A comprehensive mitigation approach should take into account hotspots of all anuran records, and also of target species for selecting locations for amphibian passages and fencing. Roadside ditches, artificial waterbodies, and conventional street lights should be reduced as much as possible, since they may represent ecological traps for anuran populations.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Coelho, Igor Pfeifer
Teixeira, Fernanda Zimmermann
Colombo, Patrick
Coelho, Artur Vicente Pfeifer
Kindel, Andreas

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus