Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




CLIMATE SCIENCE
Front Row Seats to Climate Change
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) May 22, 2013


Two USGS scientists conducting field work collecting and processing samples. Photo Credit USGS.

By day, insects provide the white noise of the South, but the night belongs to the amphibians. In a typical year, the Southern air hangs heavy from the humidity and the sounds of wildlife. The Southeast, home to more than 140 species of frogs, toads and salamanders, is the center of amphibian biodiversity in our nation.

If the ponds and swamps are the auditorium for their symphonic choruses, the scientists of the U.S. Geological Survey's Amphibian Research and Monitoring Initiative, or ARMI, have front-row seats.

Amphibians, which rely on water for part or all of their life cycle, must adjust to often atypical weather. Some years bring heavy deluges, such as the region's notorious hurricanes, and others bring the transformations that come with drought. Amphibians around the world seem to be experiencing the worst declines documented among vertebrates.

While habitat loss is the number one reason for population declines, research suggests that disease, invasive species, contaminants and perhaps other factors contribute to declines in protected areas.

And then there's climate change, another stressor for amphibians to contend with. Climate change projections indicate that rainfall will increasingly come in pulses, with greater deluges and longer periods of drought.

Scientists have long suspected that climate change is an important factor in amphibian declines, and resource managers are asking whether conservation measures might help species persist or adapt in a changing climate. Three recent U.S. Geological Survey studies offer some insight into the issue.

Why amphibians?
Amphibians, which are declining throughout the world, play an important role in ecological systems. They eat small creatures, including mosquitos, and they are food themselves for larger creatures, such as birds and snakes. Because amphibians are the middle of the food chain - and sensitive to environmental disruption because of their aquatic or semi-aquatic lives - their existence is often used as an indication of ecosystem health.

Scientists in ARMI, a program started by Congress in 2000 in response to concerns about amphibian declines, have been working to unravel the ups and downs of amphibian populations to support effective conservation and resource management decisions. To do this, ARMI scientists and field crews monitor the status of amphibians, research the causes of declines, and scientifically evaluate projects undertaken to sustain these species and their habitats across the country.

Pond life - it's not easy being green!
ARMI scientists looked at a range of amphibian species found in the Southeast and posed the question, "What will happen to their populations under a scenario of changes in rainfall patterns - more deluges alternating with droughts - which is being predicted by current climate models?"

It turns out that understanding how climate affects amphibians requires "thinking like the ponds" in which they live. Amphibians have unique life cycles - most alternate between living in water as juveniles, to maturing and dispersing on land, then returning to water again as adults to mate and lay eggs.

When USGS scientists reviewed what was known about amphibian responses to rainfall, it turned out that both extremes in rainfall - drought and heavy rainfall events - can decrease the number of amphibians.

The amphibians' response depends on a balance between these two key factors. If ponds dry up while aquatic juveniles are developing, survival of the next generation is lowered. However, if a deluge occurs at that time, nearby pools that often contain fish will be physically connected with the pools containing juvenile amphibians, and the fish will eat the juveniles.

In essence, the study showed that extreme rainfall events are key to predicting amphibian responses to climate, because such events affect the amount and timing of water in ponds that they depend on. The full review of species' responses was published in March 2013 edition of the journal Biology. Drought and declining salamanders

Knowing that each species responds to droughts and deluges based on the particulars of their biology, scientists set out to test just how these dynamics played out in the southeastern U.S. by looking at larval mole salamanders in small isolated ponds in St. Mark's National Wildlife Refuge, Florida.

Larval mole salamanders have a similar life cycle to the flatwoods salamander, a federally threatened species found on the refuge. Because it is difficult to study the flatwoods salamander directly, and mole salamanders are ecologically similar, scientists study the mole salamander instead, knowing that whatever affects them will likely impact the flatwoods salamander as well.

In the four years of the study, drought consistently decreased salamander occupancy in ponds. To support young salamanders, rain has to fill a pond during the breeding season and then the pond has to stay filled long enough for larvae to transform into the next life stage.

Therefore, scientists confirmed that drought did indeed cause short-term declines in mole salamanders - suggesting that the listed flatwoods salamander may face a similar fate under climate change.

The results of the mole salamander study are published in the April 2013 edition of the journal Wetlands.

Can habitat conservation make a difference for frogs and toads?

To answer this question, USGS scientists examined whether the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service Wetlands Reserve Program was helping address the problem. The Wetlands Reserve Program is a voluntary USDA program offering landowners the opportunity to protect, restore, and enhance wetlands on their property.

To assess the potential benefit of WRP restoration to amphibians, in this case, frogs and toads, USGS scientists surveyed 30 randomly selected WRP sites and 20 nearby agricultural sites in the Mississippi Delta in northwest Mississippi.

The scientists found that WRP sites had more kinds of species and was home to more numbers of amphibians than the agricultural sites studied. The restoration of wetland hydrology appeared to provide the most immediate benefit to the animals.

What's next?
With multiple studies pointing to the synergistic role of climate change, disease, habitat change, and other factors in amphibian declines, USGS and its partners are continuing their research to provide information which resource managers can use in making decisions that can help arrest or reverse declines.

Additionally, a new study that provides the first-ever broad assessment of amphibian populations in the United States, and the first quantitative estimate of trends for amphibian populations at a continental scale, will be published later in May. A news release announcing the results will be available on the USGS website.

The study can be found in the March 2013 edition of the journal Restoration Ecology.

.


Related Links
National Wetlands Research Center - Amphibian Monitoring Program
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








CLIMATE SCIENCE
World must face up to climate-driven disasters: UN
Geneva (AFP) May 21, 2013
The world needs to wake up to the risk of a spike in natural disasters linked to climate change and strive to find ways to cut the human and economic cost, the United Nations warned on Tuesday. "We live in a time of huge natural disasters which are made worse by climate change," the UN's deputy secretary-general, Jan Eliasson, told reporters at the start of a three-day conference on risk red ... read more


CLIMATE SCIENCE
Engineered microbes grow in the dark

Bacteria use hydrogen, carbon dioxide to produce electricity

U.S. said well-positioned to grow pond scum as fuel source

Scientists develop 'green' pretreatment of Miscanthus for biofuels

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Principles of locomotion in confined spaces could help robot teams work underground

Robots learn to take a proper handoff by following digitized human examples

Wayne State University researcher's technique helps robotic vehicles find their way, help humans

MakerBot and Robohand

CLIMATE SCIENCE
A WindVision For Alberta

Not just blowing in the wind: Compressing air for renewable energy storage

Goldman Sachs to invest in Japan green energy

Morocco to harness the wind in energy hunt

CLIMATE SCIENCE
China's Tri-Ring buys Polish bearings maker FLT Krasnik

Hong Kong launches first electric taxis

China owner smashes up his Maserati in service protest

Germany's Volkswagen plans new China car plant

CLIMATE SCIENCE
US House in message vote: build Keystone pipeline

Maduro's confused signals bode ill for Venezuela's recovery

Oil recovers after dive on Chinese data

EU leaders face up to shale challenge

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Westinghouse and State Nuclear Power Technology Form Joint Venture To Better Serve Global Market

Japan nuclear reactor atop active fault: regulator

Belgium to re-start two reactors halted since 2012

German energy shift faces headwinds

CLIMATE SCIENCE
New report identifies strategies to achieve net-zero energy homes

Finnish researchers to provide solutions for energy-efficient repairs in residential districts in Moscow

Paraguay ups stakes in electricity row with Brazil, Argentina

EU says emissions down, but pollution scheme falters

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Amazon River exhales virtually all carbon taken up by rain forest

Morton Arboretum Partners with NASA to Understand why Trees Fail

Indonesia court ruling boosts indigenous land rights

Indonesia extends logging ban to protect rainforest




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement