Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Michigan Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Division Natural Heritage Program Michigan Frog Survey Update December 2001 only 1 or 2 at each site, you’re too late. If you’re doing your 2nd run and hearing only green frogs and an occasional gray treefrog, you’re too late. Wood frogs will be missed if you’re out past the 2nd week of April in the Lower Peninsula. They’ll usually call for about a week later in the Upper Peninsula. You might even be hearing the right species at the right time, but think about the abundance in which you’re hearing them. The focus of your survey should be to be out there, listening, when the various species are calling at their peak, which is going to be the result of perfect calling weather and timing. We don’t want to just try to be out there when there’s still a few calling, we want to listen when they’re calling in frenzied proportions, at the peak of the breeding season. In order to do that, not only does the weather have to be right, but timing is a factor too. Another timing issue results when you do your runs too close together. The instructions say to make sure you wait at least two weeks between runs. Longer than two weeks is even better. The more your runs are distributed throughout the spring months, the more species you’ll hear and you will be reporting a more realistic picture of what is happening in your area. If runs are too close together you will probably be reporting much the same species in both runs. Watch your timing Just a few reminders to keep everyone on the same page when we’re out there listening to frogs in the springtime. Even though this past spring was not unusually cool or warm, for some reason, many volunteers ran their routes really late. In the past, you’ve been urged to pay more attention to temperature and weather conditions than to date because weather is what frogs respond to. Well, this is still true, but there are limits to weather impacts when frog calling starts and ends. Each species only calls for so many days a year, weather permitting. If they’ve been calling for say, a month, no matter what the weather is, their breeding season may have run its course. Even though temperatures may be unseasonal, either too warm or too cool, survey results will be compromised if you wait too long for those temperatures to be just right. I am enclosing an updated version of the frog survey instructions with this update that contains new information on timing of surveys. Basically, the rule of frog call surveying in Michigan is as follows: 1st run: April 2nd run: May 3rd run: June Mink Frogs Herpetologists in the Great Lakes region believe the mink frog is declining. For those observers that have survey routes within this species’ range (i.e. the Upper Peninsula) please be on the lookout. This species is known to call in the wee hours of the morning so you have to be diligent to hear these guys most years. Please try to make the effort to hear this species on your route. Zone 1 may start as early as the last half of March and Zones 3 & 4 may go as late as the first half of July, depending on weather conditions. Please do not run your route too late – or too early. If you’re in Oakland County, for example, and you have not had a chance to do your 3rd run and its July, don’t bother running it. But, please send in your 1st and 2nd run results. There are indicators that you are running your route too late. For example, if you’re out on your 3rd run and hearing predominantly green frogs and 1 The Michigan Frog and Toad Survey: A Five-Year Summary of a Successful Monitoring Program Observer Study A big THANK YOU to all of those who completed and sent in their observer survey questionnaires and sample routes!! By Kristen Genet, Dept. of Zoology, Michigan State University Herp Atlas Update The Herp Atlas Handbook is now available! All active Frog Survey volunteers were automatically sent a manual. If you didn’t get one, let me know. The Michigan Frog and Toad Survey was initiated in 1996 and has been organized through the Natural Heritage Program in the Wildlife Division of the MI DNR. With any monitoring program, there is so much annual variability that it is imperative that multiple years of data are collected before that data can be analyzed to look for patterns of distribution and abundance in space or time. We now have six years of data (1996-2001), and this summary represents an analysis of the first five years (1996-2000). Even though we now have data from a number of years, it is likely not enough to accurately depict trends of frog and toad abundance in Michigan. At least ten and preferably 15 or 20 years of data collection will be necessary for a comprehensive look at what is happening to our frogs and toads. The objectives of this project were to: (1) evaluate the status of anuran populations in southern Michigan using the first five years of data collected in the Michigan DNR Frog and Toad Survey, (2) determine short-term trends and data needs for future monitoring efforts in Michigan, (3) project abundance of species over the next few decades and to their stable abundance distributions, and (4) evaluate potential biases in the dataset due to diverse volunteer backgrounds. Validation of Calls Please remember to send in a recording or other type of validation of Cope’s gray treefrogs and Blanchards’s cricket frogs the first time you hear them. The Cope’s gray treefrog’s call is easy to misinterpret and the cricket frog is a species of special concern so we want to be sure you’re hearing what you think you hear. Once you have confirmed a call, you do not have to confirm it if you hear the call again in subsequent years. If you consider yourself knowledgeable enough to identify these species without validation, please contact me and I’ll make sure I have that on record. Michigan Joins National Frog Survey The 2001 survey year was the first year that the national survey protocols are implemented. Through NAAMP (North American Amphibian Monitoring Program) the US Geological Survey (USGS) office in Patuxent, Maryland have, with the help of state frog survey coordinators, developed frog survey protocols that will be used across the country. Similar to the Breeding Bird Surveys, also coordinated by the USGS in Patuxent, the protocols will help to standardize the way frog surveys are done so that the data we get can be compared between states and between regions. Only NAAMP routes that were computer generated by the USGS folks can be included in the national study, however. Observers with NAAMP routes will be able to enter data online so that it goes directly to NAAMP. If you’re interested in doing a NAAMP route, please contact me. Routes are statewide but not in every county. NAAMP protocols are slightly different than what we’ve been doing here in Michigan. Those running non-NAAMP routes need to keep doing their routes as they have in the past. 1999 2000 1998 1997 70% 1996 Figure 1: Year Route Initiated Statewide, there are a total of 227 routes, and most of those are concentrated in the southern lower peninsula. Each of these routes consists of 10 sites, which are surveyed three times each spring, corresponding to the phenology of the early, middle, and late spring breeding frogs and toads. Most of these routes were established in 1996, when the monitoring program was also started, although new routes are added each year (Fig. 1). Of these routes, more than half of them have been surveyed for three or more years, which is crucial for detecting long-term trends in abundance and distribution (Fig. 2). 2 5 1 4 5 32% Number of Species 24% 14% 16% 14% 2 3 1996 1997 4.5 1998 4 1999 2000 3.5 3 2.5 Vernal Pond Figure. 2 Number of Years Route Surveyed Wet Meadow Bog or Fen Marsh Wooded Swamp Pond Other Wetland Type Figure 3: Mean number of frog and toad species in Volunteer commitment to survey the same route for a sequence of several years is very important to the success of a monitoring program. Other states have similar monitoring programs, and the Wisconsin Frog and Toad Survey reports that their average volunteer participates in their program for eight years. We are in the process of surveying volunteer opinions and their estimated commitment to this monitoring program, and it seems that in general, volunteers plan to survey their routes as long as they are living in the area and are able. For this summary, the methods used included: (1) evaluate changes in abundance and site occupancy over the five-year period with linear regression analyses (Eastern gray treefrogs and Cope’s gray treefrogs were combined for this analysis), (2) the analyses were performed only on sites that have been surveyed for all five years (585 sites representing 59 routes), (3) abundance was calculated and projected into the future using modified transition matrix models, and (4) a standardized questionnaire and frog and toad call recordings were sent to volunteers to evaluate the influence of volunteer background and experience and to assess the usefulness of the current protocols. Statewide, there seems to be a decrease in the number of species found in different wetland types (Fig. 3). The change in the number of species in bogs/fens and wooded swamps was not statistically significant, but the other wetland types showed a significant decline in the mean number of species found there from 1996-2000. This could be a result of either a real decrease in species richness in these sites or the sites becoming inappropriate for amphibian breeding. For example, with a warm spring and less rain as we’ve seen in recent years, fewer vernal ponds are filling with enough water to support amphibian breeding. Four species are found at more than 50% of all sites; those species include spring peepers, gray treefrogs, green frogs, and western chorus frogs. The remaining seven species were found at less than 50% of the sites surveyed. Three species (gray treefrogs, leopard frogs, different wetland types and Fowler’s toads) declined in the proportion of sites occupied over the five-year period, while bullfrogs showed a slight increase in the proportion of sites they were found calling in (Fig. 4). The number of sites where gray treefrogs were heard calling in highest abundance (call index of 3) declined from 1996-2001, while the number of sites where this species was absent increased over the same time period. Similarly, the number of sites where leopard frogs were heard calling in intermediate abundance (call index of 2) declined while the number of sites where this species was absent increased. For bullfrogs, the number of sites where they were absent declined, and the number of sites with a few individuals calling (call index of 1) increased. What do these short-term trends mean for longterm population persistence? To answer that question, I used modified matrix population models to project future abundance based on changes in abundance that happened between 1996-2000. Matrix models describe changes from one time period to the next based on a set time interval (five years, in this case). Repeated projections of the model provide an indication of longterm population dynamics. The results showed that two species that are abundant and widespread (spring peepers and gray treefrogs) may show an increase in the number of sites where they are absent while the number of sites where these species call in full chorus (call index of 3) decreases (Fig. 5). Very little change in abundance was seen for the other species, which indicates that based on the first five years of data we have collected, most species will remain at levels that we currently are observing. Three species were present at too few sites to make accurate predictions with these models (Blanchard’s cricket frogs, pickerel frogs, and Fowler’s toads). We are in the process of evaluating the current protocols and call indices used as well as the influence of volunteer background and experience on the data that are collected. Typically in a scientific study, data are collected by one or a few individuals to control for differences among observers. In the Michigan Frog and 3 Toad survey, hundreds of volunteer observers send in data each year. To assess any potential biases in the dataset due to differences among volunteer observers, we sent out a questionnaire and standardized recording of frog and toad calls to all of the volunteers who have recently contributed data to the Frog and Toad survey. We are currently in the process of analyzing that data, and we hope to determine whether (and which) species are consistently missed, misidentified, overestimated, or underestimated. We also intend to determine whether the current call indices that we are using are useful and assigned similarly by our diverse volunteers. In summary, trends over the past five years suggest that anurans in southern Michigan may be suffering some declines in abundance and/or distribution. Long-term monitoring and continual data collection is essential for tracking changes in these amphibian communities. Short-term changes in site occupancy and abundance may lead to long-term changes in anuran communities in this area. Some of the more uncommon species (i.e., Cope’s gray treefrog, pickerel frog, Blanchard’s cricket frog) deserve additional detailed studies and their occurrence at survey sites should be verified. In terms of the future of the Michigan Frog and Toad Survey, the number of new recruits and retention of established volunteers in the program are both high. Participation in training and refresher workshops held earlier this year was also high. The value of this dataset increases as each additional year is added, so we hope that the first five years is a good indication of the level of participation we will see for the duration of the monitoring program. Michigan Frog and Toad Survey Web Page: http://www.dnr.state.mi.us/Wildlife.asp?linkid =72&Link=link&imageID= NAAMP Web Page: http://www.mp1-pwrc.usgs.gov/amphib/sitemap.html Survey Coordinator: Lori Sargent DNR Wildlife Division P.O. Box 30180 Lansing, MI 48909 (517) 373-9418 Fax: (517) 373-6705 E-Mail: [email protected] The Michigan Department of Natural Resources (DNR) provides equal opportunities for employment and for access to Michigan natural resources. State and/or Federal laws prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, color, sex, national origin, religion, disability, age, marital status, height and weight. If you believe that you have been discriminated against in any program, activity, or facility, please write the DNR Equal Opportunity Office, PO Box 30028, Lansing, MI 48909-7528, or the Michigan Department of Civil Rights, 1200 6th Avenue, Detroit, MI 48226, or the Office of Human Resources, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, DC 20240. For additional information or assistance on this publication, contact DNR, Wildlife Division, PO Box 30180, Lansing, MI 48909. PRINTED BY THE AUTHORITY OF: P. A. 451 of 1994. TOTAL NUMBER OF COPIES PRINTED:...............................400 TOTAL COST: .....................................................................$10.80 COST PER COPY: ..............................................................$0.027 Michigan Department of Natural Resources 4