Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 31 May 2021

Reptile and Amphibian Diversity and Abundance in an Urban Landscape: Impacts of Fragmentation and the Conservation Value of Small Patches

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Page Range: 424 – 435
DOI: 10.1643/h2019261
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Urbanization is a major contributor to habitat loss and fragmentation and is considered a global threat to biodiversity. We studied reptile and amphibian species diversity and abundance in a highly fragmented landscape adjacent to the second largest metropolitan area in the United States. Habitat patches in our study area were made up of remnant native vegetation surrounded by roads, housing, and other urban development. Species richness and diversity were positively associated with patch size, but patch age was not significantly associated with community characteristics. Four relatively common species were not detected in the small patches, indicating the possibility they had been extirpated by the time monitoring began, and six rarer species were not detected or detected only once in these patches. Although the patch size effect on species diversity was strong, we found that several of the small habitat patches had similar diversity to large patches, indicating potential value of these small habitat patches in protecting species as “microreserves.” In addition, one lizard species was found to be significantly more abundant in the smaller patches. To determine if abundance changed over time, we compared capture rates for four common lizards at the same sites ten years later. For three of the four species, abundance decreased over that period, specifically in the small patches. Although our long-term monitoring has confirmed that the full suite of herpetofauna is currently preserved in the study area overall, declines even in the common species over time hint at the potential severity of the threat of urbanization to rare species.

Copyright: © 2021 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.

Map of the study area in the Simi Hills area of Southern California, pitfall trap locations, and habitat patches (S1–S7, L1–L3, C1–C2) surrounded by urbanization.


Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.

The relationship between species diversity (Shannon's H') and patch area (log transformed, km2) for terrestrial herpetofauna in the Simi Hills area of Southern California.


Fig. 3.
Fig. 3.

Sample-based exact species accumulation curves for small, large, and core patches scaled by (A) the number of sites, and (B) patch area (log transformed, km2) for terrestrial herpetofauna in the Simi Hills area of Southern California.


Fig. 4.
Fig. 4.

Abundance of Side-blotched Lizards (Uta stansburiana; number of individual captures in each pitfall trap array) is significantly associated with area (see text) in the Simi Hills area of Southern California.


Fig. 5.
Fig. 5.

Relative abundance of Western Fence Lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis; SCOC) and Side-blotched Lizards (Uta stansburiana; UTST) across the Simi Hills study area.


Fig. 6.
Fig. 6.

Number of individuals captured for four lizard species in the Simi Hills area of Southern California. Each bar represents captures for each species at the same nine pitfall arrays (in small, large, or core patches) for a 20-month period (corrected for effort and season; see methods) with a ten-year gap between periods. Over the ten years, counts for three species (Western Skink, Western Fence Lizard, Alligator Lizard) have declined and one species increased (Side-blotched Lizard).


Contributor Notes

Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, 401 W. Hillcrest Dr., Thousand Oaks, California 91360; Email: (KSD) katy_delaney@nps.gov. Send reprint requests to KSD.
U.S. Geological Survey Western Ecological Research Center–San Diego Field Station, 4165 Spruance Road, Suite 200, San Diego, California 92101.

Associate Editor: J. Kerby.

Received: 27 Jun 2019
Accepted: 08 Nov 2020
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