4.3 Article

Age and growth in a European flagship amphibian: equal performance at agricultural ponds and favourably managed aquatic sites

Journal

AQUATIC ECOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 1, Pages 37-48

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10452-018-09671-3

Keywords

Demography; Great crested newt; Skeletochronology; Triturus cristatus; Urodeles

Funding

  1. Natural England

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In human-modified landscapes, little is known about the influence of aquatic habitat types on the demographic structure of residing amphibian populations. In the present paper, we focus on a European flagship urodele species (the great crested newt Triturus cristatus) at the north-western range of its distribution, applying the method of skeletochronology to compare the ages of individuals retrieved from agricultural ponds with individuals retrieved from aquatic sites favourably managed for T. cristatus presence. Median ages ranged between 4.5 and 10.0years depending on sex and population, and did not differ between the two site categories. Females were on average older than males at both agricultural ponds as well as favourably managed sites. Median ages at sexual maturity (3years for females and 2years for males) were 4years below the most commonly observed age cohort in both sexes, suggesting that young adults regularly forgo reproduction. Mean body size did not differ between agricultural ponds and favourably managed sites. However, the former were characterised by a higher variance in body size, which is possibly linked to more unstable ecological conditions in agricultural settings. Taken together, our findings confirm that under suitable conditions agricultural ponds can harbour sustainable populations, an important finding for the broad-scale conservation management of T. cristatus which does not usually take population demographies into account.

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