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Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi

BACKGROUND: Pandi’s mushroom-tongue salamander (Bolitoglossa pandi) is one of the threatened amphibians in South America, as well as a flagship species for the Colombian conservation agenda. This species is endemic to the Andean cloud forests of the western slope of the Cordillera Oriental of Colomb...

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Autores principales: Angarita-Sierra, Teddy, Bonilla-Gómez, M. Argenis, Sánchez, David A., Acosta-Galvis, Andres R., Medina-Ovalle, Hefzi, Solano-Moreno, Anggi, Ulloa-Rengifo, Simon, Guevara-Guevara, Daniela, Torres-Ramirez, Juan J., Curaca-Fierro, Sebastián, Cabrera-Amaya, Diego M., Infante-Betancour, Jhon A., Londoño-Montaño, Luisa F., Albarán-Montoya, Diana X., Peña-Baez, Lesly R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7520094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33024630
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9901
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author Angarita-Sierra, Teddy
Bonilla-Gómez, M. Argenis
Sánchez, David A.
Acosta-Galvis, Andres R.
Medina-Ovalle, Hefzi
Solano-Moreno, Anggi
Ulloa-Rengifo, Simon
Guevara-Guevara, Daniela
Torres-Ramirez, Juan J.
Curaca-Fierro, Sebastián
Cabrera-Amaya, Diego M.
Infante-Betancour, Jhon A.
Londoño-Montaño, Luisa F.
Albarán-Montoya, Diana X.
Peña-Baez, Lesly R.
author_facet Angarita-Sierra, Teddy
Bonilla-Gómez, M. Argenis
Sánchez, David A.
Acosta-Galvis, Andres R.
Medina-Ovalle, Hefzi
Solano-Moreno, Anggi
Ulloa-Rengifo, Simon
Guevara-Guevara, Daniela
Torres-Ramirez, Juan J.
Curaca-Fierro, Sebastián
Cabrera-Amaya, Diego M.
Infante-Betancour, Jhon A.
Londoño-Montaño, Luisa F.
Albarán-Montoya, Diana X.
Peña-Baez, Lesly R.
author_sort Angarita-Sierra, Teddy
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pandi’s mushroom-tongue salamander (Bolitoglossa pandi) is one of the threatened amphibians in South America, as well as a flagship species for the Colombian conservation agenda. This species is endemic to the Andean cloud forests of the western slope of the Cordillera Oriental of Colombia, occurring only in the department of Cundinamarca within a narrow elevational range. At night, B. pandi can be seen perching on the upper side of leaves at heights ranging from ground level to 2.5 m. During the day, it can be found under leaf litter or cover objects. Few studies have provided relevant information that can help the Colombian government to formulate lines of action for the conservation of this species; consequently, its threat assessments so far have been based on very limited information. METHODS: We conducted surveys for salamanders in four municipalities of Cundinamarca, Colombia, using two approaches: visual encounter surveys (Guaduas and Villeta) and the basic sampling protocol for single-species occupancy modeling (Supatá and Venecia). Multivariate analyses were employed to explore the correlation between habitat structure and natural history traits, abundance, and detection/non-detection of B. pandi. We evaluated the B. pandi activity pattern through kernel density curves for each sampling occasion and explored the variability of salamander abundance during their activity period by performing a nested ANOVA. RESULTS: We report the discovery of two new populations of B. pandi, which represent the most northwestern records known. A significant correlation between body length, body mass, and habitat structure was observed. Multivariate analyses indicated that leaf litter depth, mean temperature, percent vegetation cover, and altitude were the habitat variables that together explained 60.3% of the B. pandi abundance variability, as well as the main determinants of its optimal habitat. Bolitoglossa pandi exhibits an activity pattern characterized by two main activity peaks, in which niche time-partitioning was observed. Across the surveyed area, we found a healthy, stable, highly dense population of B. pandi (>1,300 individuals), with seasonal variability between development stages. DISCUSSION: Given the high habitat specificity of B. pandi, the species is highly vulnerable to local changes. Thus, we recommend that B. pandi be retained as Endangered (EN) on the IUCN Red List, based on the IUCN Criterion B, given its restricted extent of occurrence (ca. 2,500 km(2)) and the ongoing threats from agriculture, cattle ranching, logging, and urban development, which continue to reduce its suitable habitat.
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spelling pubmed-75200942020-10-05 Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi Angarita-Sierra, Teddy Bonilla-Gómez, M. Argenis Sánchez, David A. Acosta-Galvis, Andres R. Medina-Ovalle, Hefzi Solano-Moreno, Anggi Ulloa-Rengifo, Simon Guevara-Guevara, Daniela Torres-Ramirez, Juan J. Curaca-Fierro, Sebastián Cabrera-Amaya, Diego M. Infante-Betancour, Jhon A. Londoño-Montaño, Luisa F. Albarán-Montoya, Diana X. Peña-Baez, Lesly R. PeerJ Biodiversity BACKGROUND: Pandi’s mushroom-tongue salamander (Bolitoglossa pandi) is one of the threatened amphibians in South America, as well as a flagship species for the Colombian conservation agenda. This species is endemic to the Andean cloud forests of the western slope of the Cordillera Oriental of Colombia, occurring only in the department of Cundinamarca within a narrow elevational range. At night, B. pandi can be seen perching on the upper side of leaves at heights ranging from ground level to 2.5 m. During the day, it can be found under leaf litter or cover objects. Few studies have provided relevant information that can help the Colombian government to formulate lines of action for the conservation of this species; consequently, its threat assessments so far have been based on very limited information. METHODS: We conducted surveys for salamanders in four municipalities of Cundinamarca, Colombia, using two approaches: visual encounter surveys (Guaduas and Villeta) and the basic sampling protocol for single-species occupancy modeling (Supatá and Venecia). Multivariate analyses were employed to explore the correlation between habitat structure and natural history traits, abundance, and detection/non-detection of B. pandi. We evaluated the B. pandi activity pattern through kernel density curves for each sampling occasion and explored the variability of salamander abundance during their activity period by performing a nested ANOVA. RESULTS: We report the discovery of two new populations of B. pandi, which represent the most northwestern records known. A significant correlation between body length, body mass, and habitat structure was observed. Multivariate analyses indicated that leaf litter depth, mean temperature, percent vegetation cover, and altitude were the habitat variables that together explained 60.3% of the B. pandi abundance variability, as well as the main determinants of its optimal habitat. Bolitoglossa pandi exhibits an activity pattern characterized by two main activity peaks, in which niche time-partitioning was observed. Across the surveyed area, we found a healthy, stable, highly dense population of B. pandi (>1,300 individuals), with seasonal variability between development stages. DISCUSSION: Given the high habitat specificity of B. pandi, the species is highly vulnerable to local changes. Thus, we recommend that B. pandi be retained as Endangered (EN) on the IUCN Red List, based on the IUCN Criterion B, given its restricted extent of occurrence (ca. 2,500 km(2)) and the ongoing threats from agriculture, cattle ranching, logging, and urban development, which continue to reduce its suitable habitat. PeerJ Inc. 2020-09-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7520094/ /pubmed/33024630 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9901 Text en ©2020 Angarita-Sierra et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Angarita-Sierra, Teddy
Bonilla-Gómez, M. Argenis
Sánchez, David A.
Acosta-Galvis, Andres R.
Medina-Ovalle, Hefzi
Solano-Moreno, Anggi
Ulloa-Rengifo, Simon
Guevara-Guevara, Daniela
Torres-Ramirez, Juan J.
Curaca-Fierro, Sebastián
Cabrera-Amaya, Diego M.
Infante-Betancour, Jhon A.
Londoño-Montaño, Luisa F.
Albarán-Montoya, Diana X.
Peña-Baez, Lesly R.
Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi
title Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi
title_full Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi
title_fullStr Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi
title_full_unstemmed Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi
title_short Distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander Bolitoglossa pandi
title_sort distribution, habitat suitability, conservation state and natural history of endangered salamander bolitoglossa pandi
topic Biodiversity
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7520094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33024630
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9901
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