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Impacts of Agriculture on Amphibians at Multiple Scales

by Henna Piha
Dissertação ()

Abstract

Agriculture-mediated habitat loss and degradation together with climate change are among the greatest global threats to species, communities, and ecosystem functioning. During the last century, more than 50% of the worlds wetlands have been lost and agricultural activities have subjected wetland species to increased isolation and decreased quality of habitats. Likewise, as a part of agricultural intensifi cation, the use of pesticides has increased notably, and pesticide residues occur frequently in wetlands making the exposure of wetland organisms to pesticides highly probable. In this thesis, a set of ecotoxicological and landscape ecological studies were carried out to investigate pesticide-effects on tadpoles, and species-habitat relationships of amphibians in agricultural landscapes. The results show that the fi tness of R. temporaria tadpoles can be negatively affected by sublethal pesticide concentrations, and that pesticides may increase the costs of response to natural environmental stressors. However, tadpoles may also be able to compensate for some of the negative effects of pesticides. The results further demonstrate that both historic and current-day agricultural land use can negatively impact amphibians, but that in some cases the costs of living in agricultural habitats may only become apparent when amphibians face other environmental stressors, such as drought. Habitat heterogeneity may, however, increase the persistence of amphibians in agricultural landscapes. Hence, the results suggest that amphibians are likely to be affected by agricultural processes that operate at several spatial and temporal scales, and that it is probable that various processes related to current-day agriculture will affect both larval and adult amphibians. The results imply that maintaining dense wetland patterns could enhance persistence of amphibian populations in agricultural habitats, and indicate that heterogeneous landscapes may lower the risk of regional amphibian population declines under extreme weather perturbations.

Cite this document (BETA)

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Impacts of Agriculture on Amphibi...

Impacts of Agriculture on Amphibians at Multiple Scales Henna Piha HELSINKI 2006 ISBN 952-92-1163-5 EDITA HELSINKI 2006 Impacts of Agriculture on Amphibians at Multiple Scales Henna Piha
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Impacts of Agriculture on Amphibians at Multiple Scales Henna Piha Ecological Genetics Research Unit Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences Faculty of Biosciences University of Helsinki Finland Academic dissertation To be presented, with permission of the Faculty of Biosciences of the University of Helsinki, for public criticism in the Auditorium 1041 of Biocenter 2, Viikinkaari 5, December 1st, at 12 o���clock noon. Helsinki 2006
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�� Henna Piha (chapters 0, II, IV) �� American Chemical Society (chapter I) �� American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists (chapter III) �� Blackwell Science (chapter V) Author���s address: Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences P. O. Box 65 (Viikinkaari 1) FI-00014 University of Helsinki Finland E-mail: henna.piha@helsinki.fi ISBN 952-92-1163-5 (paperback) ISBN 952-10-3472-6 (PDF) http://ethesis.helsinki.fi Layout Timo P��iv��rinta Cover design and layout P��ivi Puustinen Edita Helsinki 2006
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Impacts of Agriculture on Amphibians at Multiple Scales Henna Piha This thesis is based on the following articles, which are referred to in the text by their Roman numerals: I Teplitsky C, Piha H, Laurila A, Meril�� J. 2005. Common pesticide increases costs of antipredator defenses in Rana temporaria tadpoles. Environmental Science & Technology 39:6079-6085. II Piha H, Laurila A, Meril�� J. Pesticide effects on tadpoles: interactions with predation risk and competition, and the importance of compensatory growth. Manuscript. III Piha H, Pekkonen M, Meril�� J. 2006. Morphological abnormalities in amphibians in agricultural habitats: a case study of the common frog Rana temporaria. Copeia, in press. IV Piha H, Luoto M, Sterner M, Meril�� J. Amphibian occurrence in human-impacted landscapes is infl uenced by current-day and historic landscape characteristics. Manuscript. V Piha H, Luoto M, Piha M, Meril�� J. 2006. Anuran abundance and persistence in agricultural landscapes during a climatic extreme. Global Change Biology 12:1- 12.
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I II III IV V Original idea HP, CT HP HP JM HP AL Study design HP, CT HP, AL HP HP, JM HP, MP ML Data collection CT HP HP, MPe JM, MS HP Methods & HP, CT HP HP, MPe HP, ML HP, ML analyses MP Manuscript HP, CT HP, AL HP, JM HP, JM HP, JM preparation AL, JM JM ML ML Henna Piha (HP), C��line Teplitsky (CT), Anssi Laurila (AL), Juha Meril�� (JM), Minna Pekkonen (MPe), Miska Luoto (ML), Mattias Sterner (MS), Markus Piha (MP) Contributions Supervisors Prof. Juha Meril��, University of Helsinki, Finland Research Prof. Miska Luoto, University of Oulu, Finland Reviewers Associate Prof. Rick Relyea, University of Pittsburgh, U.S.A. Prof. David Skelly, Yale University, U.S.A. Examiner Dr. Josh Van Buskirk, University of Zurich, Switzerland

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18% Brazil
 
14% Spain
 
9% United States

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