Breeding biology of amphibians in temporary water bodies
pdf (Engels)

Trefwoorden

pond restoration
EU Habitats Directive
climate change
pond loss
metamorphosis
breeding phenology
hydroperiod
vernal pools
temporary ponds
amphibian breeding biology

Citeerhulp

Breeding biology of amphibians in temporary water bodies. (2023). Zoological Records and Reviews, 3(4), 9-16. http://zoologicalrecords.com/index.php/ZRR/article/view/82

Samenvatting

Temporary water bodies -- seasonal ponds, vernal pools, rain-fed ditches, and ephemeral wetlands that lack permanent
water connection -- represent critical breeding habitats for a disproportionate number of European amphibian species,
whose reproductive biology has evolved around the predictable seasonal hydroperiod of these systems and the relative
absence of fish predators that characterises most temporary aquatic habitats. This review synthesises evidence from 176
primary studies (2003-2023) examining the breeding biology, reproductive success, and conservation status of European
amphibians in temporary water body habitats across Mediterranean, Atlantic, Continental, and Boreal biogeographical
regions. We document breeding phenology, reproductive strategies, larval development timing, hydroperiod
requirements, and community assembly patterns for 24 European amphibian species with temporary water body
associations. Breeding season onset has advanced by a mean 6.4 +- 1.8 days per decade across 18 monitored species
(1990-2022), with Mediterranean species showing the greatest advancement (8.4 days/decade) driven by earlier and
more variable winter rainfall patterns. Temporary pond loss across Europe exceeds 73% since 1900, with hydroperiod
shortening due to climate change and groundwater abstraction documented at 68.4% of monitored temporary ponds.
Minimum hydroperiod requirements for successful metamorphosis are species-specific (range 42-128 days) and
represent the critical vulnerability for species in drying landscapes. Conservation interventions -- pond creation,
hydroperiod extension through impermeable liners, grazing management to maintain open structures -- are evaluated
against species-specific breeding biology requirements. Implications for EU Habitats Directive Article 17 assessment and
Nature Restoration Law freshwater habitat restoration targets are discussed.

pdf (Engels)

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