Date Available
7-12-2016
Year of Publication
2016
Document Type
Master's Thesis
Degree Name
Master of Forestry (MF)
College
Agriculture, Food and Environment
Department/School/Program
Forestry
Advisor
Dr. Steven J. Price
Abstract
Mountaintop removal mining (MTR) is a notorious stressor of stream ecosystems in the Central Appalachians. Valley fills (VF) lead to reduced occupancy, abundance, and species richness of stream salamanders. Multiple factors may be responsible for these reductions, but specifically habitat fragmentation and degradation may reduce colonization rates and increase local extinction rates. From 2013-2015, repeated counts of salamanders were conducted in stream reaches impacted by MTR/VF and compared to counts in reference reaches to answer the question: do stream salamander population dynamics differ between stream reaches impacted by MTR/VF and reference stream reaches? I also investigated dynamics of stream habitat using measures relevant to stream salamander persistence. Accordingly, I examined number of cover objects, percent detritus, hydroperiod, and specific conductance. From the salamander capture data, colonization and survival probabilities were lower in MTR/VF reaches than reference reaches. MTR/VF reaches also had fewer cover objects, higher percent detritus, constant stream flow, and elevated specific conductance. Although specific conductance was increased in MTR/VF reaches, it was not strongly correlated with colonization and survival. I suggest reduced rates of colonization and survival in MTR/VF stream reaches are driven by inhibited dispersal and reduced individual survival due to degraded terrestrial and aquatic environments.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
http://dx.doi.org/10.13023/ETD.2016.279
Recommended Citation
Freytag, Sara B., "Effects of Mountaintop Removal Mining on Population Dynamics of Stream Salamanders" (2016). Theses and Dissertations--Forestry and Natural Resources. 27.
https://uknowledge.uky.edu/forestry_etds/27
Included in
Environmental Monitoring Commons, Forest Biology Commons, Natural Resources and Conservation Commons, Population Biology Commons, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology Commons