2014
DOI: 10.1002/jez.1887
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Anuran larval developmental plasticity and survival in response to variable salinity of ecologically relevant timing and magnitude

Abstract: Salinity in affected freshwater ecosystems fluctuates with seasonal rainfall, tidal flux, rates of evaporation, chemical runoff and the influence of secondary salinization. Environmental stressors such as salinity can have lasting effects on anuran development, yet little is known about the effects of fluctuating salinity on tadpole ontogeny or the effects of differing magnitudes of salinity exposure, as would occur in natural wetland systems. We examined how salinity fluctuations affected survival, growth and… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Although these selection pressures may be common in some environments, amphibians in many other environments may experience much-more unpredictable, dramatic salinity selection events. Indeed, it has been argued that dramatically fluctuating salinity levels are the norm, rather than the exception, in most environments (Wu et al 2012;Kearney et al 2014).…”
Section: The Nature Of Selection In Osmoticallymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although these selection pressures may be common in some environments, amphibians in many other environments may experience much-more unpredictable, dramatic salinity selection events. Indeed, it has been argued that dramatically fluctuating salinity levels are the norm, rather than the exception, in most environments (Wu et al 2012;Kearney et al 2014).…”
Section: The Nature Of Selection In Osmoticallymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Road deicing events also result in extreme, transient spikes of salinity in roadside aquatic habitats, not unlike a coastal storm event Wade 1992, 1996), and habitat degradation and the changing of agricultural practices are also leading to extreme and unpredictable fluctuations of salinity in many inland habitats (Kearney et al 2014). Unpredictable episodes of selection therefore probably play some of the most important roles in amphibian adaption to salt in both inland and coastal natural and anthropogenically altered environments.…”
Section: The Nature Of Selection In Osmoticallymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Compensatory growth of animals has mostly been studied in response to biotic stressors, such as food deprivation, density and predation risk (Metcalfe & Monaghan, ; Räsänen, Laurila & Merilä, ; Ali et al ., ; Vonesh & Bolker, ; Capellan & Nicieza, ; Jasienski, ; Hector et al ., ). Except for temperature (Mortensen & Damsgård, ; Nicieza & Metcalfe, ; Maclean & Metcalfe, ; Metcalfe & Monaghan, ; Ali et al ., ), few studies have addressed compensatory growth in response to abiotic stressors, and this is especially true for salinity (Squires et al ., ; Wu, Gomez‐Mestre & Kam, ; Kearney et al ., ). However, this is an ecologically and evolutionarily relevant question for animals inhabiting brackish water because the salinity of such habitats may fluctuate frequently and widely either from natural events, such as tidal flux and rainfall (Wu et al ., ), or anthropogenic sources, such as road deicing salt runoff (Karraker, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%