Ecology and Evolution (Apr 2022)
Range‐wide persistence of the endangered arroyo toad (Anaxyrus californicus) for 20+ years following a prolonged drought
- Cynthia J. Hitchcock,
- Elizabeth A. Gallegos,
- Adam R. Backlin,
- Russell Barabe,
- Peter H. Bloom,
- Kimberly Boss,
- Cheryl S. Brehme,
- Christopher W. Brown,
- Denise R. Clark,
- Elizabeth R. Clark,
- Kevin Cooper,
- Julie Donnell,
- Edward Ervin,
- Peter Famolaro,
- Kim M. Guilliam,
- Jacquelyn J. Hancock,
- Nicholas Hess,
- Steven Howard,
- Valerie Hubbartt,
- Patrick Lieske,
- Robert Lovich,
- Tritia Matsuda,
- Katherin Meyer‐Wilkins,
- Kamarul Muri,
- Barry Nerhus,
- Jeff Nordland,
- Brock Ortega,
- Robert Packard,
- Ruben Ramirez,
- Sam C. Stewart,
- Samuel Sweet,
- Manna Warburton,
- Jeffrey Wells,
- Ryan Winkleman,
- Kirsten Winter,
- Brian Zitt,
- Robert N. Fisher
Affiliations
- Cynthia J. Hitchcock
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center Santa Ana California USA
- Elizabeth A. Gallegos
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center Santa Ana California USA
- Adam R. Backlin
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center Santa Ana California USA
- Russell Barabe
- California Department of Fish and Wildlife San Diego California USA
- Peter H. Bloom
- Bloom Biological, Inc. Santa Ana California USA
- Kimberly Boss
- San Bernardino National Forest Idyllwild California USA
- Cheryl S. Brehme
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center San Diego California USA
- Christopher W. Brown
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center San Diego California USA
- Denise R. Clark
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center San Diego California USA
- Elizabeth R. Clark
- US Army Garrison Fort Hunter Liggett Fort Hunter Liggett California USA
- Kevin Cooper
- Los Padres National Forest Santa Barbara California USA
- Julie Donnell
- San Bernardino National Forest Fawnskin California USA
- Edward Ervin
- Merkel and Associates, Inc. San Diego California USA
- Peter Famolaro
- Sweetwater Authority Chula Vista California USA
- Kim M. Guilliam
- US Army Garrison Fort Hunter Liggett Fort Hunter Liggett California USA
- Jacquelyn J. Hancock
- US Army Garrison Fort Hunter Liggett Fort Hunter Liggett California USA
- Nicholas Hess
- Independent Researcher Glendale California USA
- Steven Howard
- R2 Resource Consultants, Inc. Ventura California USA
- Valerie Hubbartt
- Los Padres National Forest Santa Barbara California USA
- Patrick Lieske
- Los Padres National Forest Santa Barbara California USA
- Robert Lovich
- Naval Facilities Engineering Command Southwest San Diego California USA
- Tritia Matsuda
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center San Diego California USA
- Katherin Meyer‐Wilkins
- Independent Researcher Bellevue Idaho USA
- Kamarul Muri
- Dudek Encinitas California USA
- Barry Nerhus
- Endemic Environmental Huntington Beach California USA
- Jeff Nordland
- Southwest Field Herping Association San Diego California USA
- Brock Ortega
- Dudek Encinitas California USA
- Robert Packard
- Western Riverside County MSHCP Biological Monitoring Program Riverside California USA
- Ruben Ramirez
- Cadre Environmental Carlsbad California USA
- Sam C. Stewart
- Southwest Aquatic and Terrestrial Biology Long Beach California USA
- Samuel Sweet
- UC Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA
- Manna Warburton
- ICF Eureka California USA
- Jeffrey Wells
- Cleveland National Forest San Diego California USA
- Ryan Winkleman
- Independent Researcher Santa Ana California USA
- Kirsten Winter
- Cleveland National Forest San Diego California USA
- Brian Zitt
- ECORP Consulting Inc. Santa Ana California USA
- Robert N. Fisher
- U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center San Diego California USA
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8796
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 12,
no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a
Abstract
Abstract Prolonged drought due to climate change has negatively impacted amphibians in southern California, U.S.A. Due to the severity and length of the current drought, agencies and researchers had growing concern for the persistence of the arroyo toad (Anaxyrus californicus), an endangered endemic amphibian in this region. Range‐wide surveys for this species had not been conducted for at least 20 years. In 2017–2020, we conducted collaborative surveys for arroyo toads at historical locations. We surveyed 88 of the 115 total sites having historical records and confirmed that the arroyo toad is currently extant in at least 61 of 88 sites and 20 of 25 historically occupied watersheds. We did not detect toads at almost a third of the surveyed sites but did detect toads at 18 of 19 specific sites delineated in the 1999 Recovery Plan to meet one of four downlisting criteria. Arroyo toads are estimated to live 7–8 years, making populations susceptible to prolonged drought. Drought is estimated to increase in frequency and duration with climate change. Mitigation strategies for drought impacts, invasive aquatic species, altered flow regimes, and other anthropogenic effects could be the most beneficial strategies for toad conservation and may also provide simultaneous benefits to several other native species that share the same habitat.
Keywords