Looking ahead, guided by the past: The role of U.S. national parks in amphibian research and conservation

•Protected areas are essential for conservation because they limit human influence.•U.S. national parks contribute to amphibian conservation in many other ways.•Parks document trends and provide research into mechanisms of decline.•Parks also use decision science and adaptive management to recover p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological indicators 2022-03, Vol.136, p.108631, Article 108631
Hauptverfasser: Halstead, Brian J., Ray, Andrew M., Muths, Erin, Grant, Evan H. Campbell, Grasso, Rob, Adams, Michael J., Delaney, Kathleen Semple, Carlson, Jane, Hossack, Blake R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Protected areas are essential for conservation because they limit human influence.•U.S. national parks contribute to amphibian conservation in many other ways.•Parks document trends and provide research into mechanisms of decline.•Parks also use decision science and adaptive management to recover populations.•Collaboration within and outside parks is essential for amphibian conservation. Protected areas like national parks are essential elements of conservation because they limit human influence on the landscape, which protects biodiversity and ecosystem function. The role of national parks in conservation, however, often goes far beyond limiting human influence. The U.S. National Park Service and its system of land units contribute substantively to conservation by providing protected lands where researchers can document trends in species distributions and abundances, examine characteristics important for generating these trends, and identify and implement conservation strategies to preserve biodiversity. We reviewed the contribution of U.S. national parks to amphibian research and conservation and highlight important challenges and findings in several key areas. First, U.S. national parks were instrumental in providing strong support that amphibian declines were real and unlikely to be simply a consequence of habitat loss. Second, research in U.S. national parks provided evidence against certain hypothesized causes of decline, like UV-B radiation, and evidence for others, such as introduced species and disease. However, describing declines and identifying causes contributes to conservation only if it leads to management; importantly, U.S. national parks have implemented many conservation strategies and evaluated their effectiveness in recovering robust amphibian populations. Among these, removal of invasive species, especially fishes; conservation translocations; and habitat creation and enhancement stand out as examples of successful conservation strategies with broad applicability. Successful management for amphibians is additionally complicated by competing mandates and stakeholder interests; for example, past emphasis on increasing visitor enjoyment by introducing fish to formerly fishless lakes had devastating consequences for many amphibians. Other potential conflicts with amphibian conservation include increasing development, increased risk of introductions of disease and exotic species with increased visitation, and road mortality. Decision scien
ISSN:1470-160X
1872-7034
DOI:10.1016/j.ecolind.2022.108631