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Local and landscape scale factors influencing edge effects on woodland salamanders

Informally Refereed

Abstract

We examined local and landscape-scale variable influence on the depth and magnitude of edge effects on woodland salamanders in mature mixed mesophytic and northern hardwood forest adjacent to natural gas well sites maintained as wildlife openings. We surveyed woodland salamander occurrence from June-August 2006 at 33 gas well sites in the Monongahela National Forest, West Virginia. We used an information-theoretic approach to test nine a priori models explaining landscape-scale effects on woodland salamander capture proportion within 20 m of field edge. Salamander capture proportion was greater within 0-60 m than 61-100 m of field edges. Similarly, available coarse woody debris proportion was greater within 0-60 m than 61-100 m of field edge.

Keywords

Desmognathus, edge, field-forest interface, gas well, microclimate, mixed mesophytic, Plethodon, salamander

Citation

Moseley, Kurtis R.; Ford, W. Mark; Edwards, John W. 2009. Local and landscape scale factors influencing edge effects on woodland salamanders
https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/34375