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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Migratory orientation of ambystoma maculatum: movements near breeding ponds and displacements of migrating individuals

C. Robert Shoop
- 01 Aug 1968 - 
- Vol. 135, Iss: 1, pp 230-238
TLDR
Migrating spotted salamanders entered and departed from breeding ponds at or near the same point for three consecutive years and failed to orient to their pond or in the direction they were moving when originally collected.
Abstract
1. Migrating spotted salamanders entered and departed from breeding ponds at or near the same point. This pattern was repeated for three consecutive years.2. Animals migrating in a meadow to and from the breeding pond often traveled in a corridor 10 to 30 m. wide. Several variations from this plan were noted.3. Spotted salamanders displaced up to 500 m. may return to the home breeding pond.4. Migrating adults transferred from the border of one breeding pond to within 10 m. of another breeding pond did not move to the new pond as did controls.5. Migrating adults transported from the border of one pond to the center of another failed to orient to the old pond or in the direction they were moving when captured.6. Some adults adopted a new breeding pond when displaced.7. Animals moved to a laboratory and then released outdoors in an unfamiliar area failed to orient to their pond or in the direction they were moving when originally collected. Handling and laboratory conditions may have altered normal behavior....

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dispersal and the metapopulation paradigm in amphibian ecology and conservation : are all amphibian populations metapopulations?

TL;DR: Breeding patch isolation via limited dispersal and/or strong site fidelity was the most frequently implicated or tested metapopulation condition, however there is strong evidence that amphibian dispersal is not as uniformly limited as is often thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differentiating Migration and Dispersal Processes for Pond-Breeding Amphibians

TL;DR: To better integrate behavioral and ecological data on amphibian movements with the use of spatially explicit demographic models and guide effective conservation solutions, a synopsis of the literature regarding behavior, ecology, and evolution of movement in pond-breeding amphibians possessing biphasic life cycles is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Habitat matrix effects on pond occupancy in newts.

TL;DR: In this article, a multivariate regression analysis of the relationship of newt abundance to both pond and landscape variables demonstrated the negative influence of cultivated ground on abundance, while the width of the uncultivated sector linking the pond to the forest was a good predictor of abundance after the influences of both pond area and fish presence were removed.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Current Problems in Bird Orientation

TL;DR: In this paper, the most pressing problems of bird orientation were discussed based on a statistical reconsideration of published data and the following circular tests were applied: the Rayleigh test for uniformity, of Durand and Green-wood; the two-sample test of Watson ; the modified F test and the modified analysis of variance of Watson and Williams.
Journal ArticleDOI

Orientation of Ambystoma maculatum: Movements to and from Breeding Ponds.

TL;DR: Migrating Ambystoma maculatum tend to utilize the same track on entering and leaving breeding ponds in rain, fog, or cloudy, weather when visible celestial cues may not be available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Homing, Survivorship, and Overwintering of Larvae in Spotted Salamanders, Ambystoma maculatum

Walter G. Whitford, +1 more
- 07 Sep 1966 - 
TL;DR: The structure and carbohydrate histochemistry of mammalian salivary glands, and the properties of three proteinases from Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii venom, are studied.
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