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Description
Species conservation requires an understanding of the habitats on which that species depends as well as how it moves within and among those habitats. Knowledge of these spatial and temporal patterns is vital for effective management and research study design. Bubbling Ponds Hatchery in Cornville, Arizona, supports a robust population

Species conservation requires an understanding of the habitats on which that species depends as well as how it moves within and among those habitats. Knowledge of these spatial and temporal patterns is vital for effective management and research study design. Bubbling Ponds Hatchery in Cornville, Arizona, supports a robust population of the northern Mexican gartersnake (Thamnophis eques megalops), which was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 2014. Natural resource managers are interested in understanding the ecology of gartersnakes at this site to guide hatchery operations and to serve as a model for habitat creation and restoration. My objectives were to identify habitat selection and activity patterns of northern Mexican gartersnakes at the hatchery and how frequency of monitoring affects study results. I deployed transmitters on 42 individual gartersnakes and documented macro- and microhabitat selection, daily and seasonal activity patterns, and movement distances. Habitat selection and movements were similar between males and females and varied seasonally. During the active season (March–October), snakes primarily selected wetland edge habitat with abundant cover and were more active and moved longer distances than during other parts of the year. Gestating females selected similar locations but with less dense cover. During the inactive season (November–February), snakes were less mobile and selected upland habitats, including rocky slopes with abundant vegetation. Snakes displayed diurnal patterns of activity. Estimates of daily distance traveled decreased with less-frequent monitoring; a sampling interval of once every 24 hours yielded only 53–62% of known daily distances moved during the active season. These results can help inform management activities and research design. Conservation of this species should incorporate a landscape-level approach that includes abundant wetland edge habitat with connected upland areas. Resource managers and researchers should carefully assess timing and frequency of activities in order to meet project objectives.
ContributorsSprague, Tiffany A (Author) / Bateman, Heather L (Thesis advisor) / Cunningham, Stan C (Committee member) / Jones, Thomas R (Committee member) / Nowak, Erika M. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Human land use and land cover change alter key features of the landscape that may favor habitat selection by some species. Lizards are especially sensitive to these alterations because they rely on their external environment for regulating their body temperature. However, because of their diverse life-history traits and strategies, some

Human land use and land cover change alter key features of the landscape that may favor habitat selection by some species. Lizards are especially sensitive to these alterations because they rely on their external environment for regulating their body temperature. However, because of their diverse life-history traits and strategies, some are able to respond well to disturbance by using their habitat in various ways. To understand how they use their habitat and how human modifications may impact their ability to do this, biologists must identify where they occur and the habitat characteristics on which they depend. Therefore, I used species occupancy modeling to determine (1) whether disturbance predicts the presence of two sympatric congeneric (species of the same genus) lizard species Sceloporus grammicus and S. torquatus, and (2) which habitat characteristics are essential for predicting their occupancy and detection. I focused my study in central Mexico, a region of prevalent land use and land cover change. Here, I conducted visual encounter and habitat surveys at 100 1-hectare sites during the spring of 2019. I measured vegetation and ground cover, average tree diameter, and abundance of refuges. I recorded air temperature, relative humidity, and elevation. I summarized sites as either undisturbed or disturbed, based on the presence of human development. I also summarized sites by ecosystem type, desert or forest, based on vegetation composition (i.e., desert-adapted vs. non-desert-adapted plants), evidence of remnant forest, air temperature, and relative humidity. I found that S. torquatus was more likely to be present in disturbed habitat, whereas S. grammicus was more likely to be present in areas with leaf litter, tree cover, and woody debris. S. torquatus was twice as likely to be detected in forests than deserts, and S. grammicus was more likely to be detected at sites with high elevation and high relative humidity, low temperature, and herbaceous and grass cover. These results emphasize the utility of species occupancy modeling for estimating detection and occupancy in dynamic landscapes.
ContributorsFlores, Jennifer (Author) / Martins, Emília P. (Thesis advisor) / Bateman, Heather L (Thesis advisor) / Zuniga-Vega, J. Jaime (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020