Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 13 Feb 2024

Thermal Traits of Anurans Database for the Southeastern United States (TRAD): A Database of Thermal Trait Values for 40 Anuran Species

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Page Range: 21 – 30
DOI: 10.1643/h2022102
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Thermal traits, or how an animal responds to changing temperatures, impacts species persistence and thus biodiversity. Trait databases, as repositories of consolidated, measured organismal attributes, allow researchers to link study species with specific trait values, enabling comparisons within and among species. Trait databases also help lay the groundwork to build mechanistic linkages between organisms and the environment. However, missing or hidden physiological trait data preclude building mechanistic estimates of climate change vulnerability for many species. Thus, physiologically focused trait databases present an opportunity to consolidate data and enable species-specific or multispecies, mechanistic evaluations of climate change vulnerability. Here, we present TRAD: thermal traits of anurans database for the southeastern United States, a database of thermal trait values related to physiological thermoregulation (critical thermal minima and maxima, preferred temperature), behavioral thermoregulation (activity period, retreat emergence temperature, basking temperature, minimum and maximum foraging temperatures), and body mass for 37 anuran species found within the southeastern United States. In total, TRAD contains 858 reported trait values for 37 of 40 species found in the region from 267 peer-reviewed papers, dissertations, or theses and is easily linked with trait data available in ATraiU, an ecological trait database for anurans in the United States. TRAD contains trait values for multiple life stages and a summarization of interspecific adult trait values. Availability of trait data varied widely among traits and species. Estimates of mass were the most common trait values reported, with values available for 32 species. Behavioral trait values comprised 23% of our database, with activity period available for 34 species. We found the most trait values for Cope’s Gray Treefrog (Dryophytes chrysoscelis), with at least one trait value for eight traits in the database. Conversely, species in the genus Pseudacris generally had the fewest trait values available. Species with the largest geographic range sizes also had the greatest coverage of data across traits (rho = 0.75, P < 0.001). TRAD can aid studies of anuran response to changing temperatures, physiological niche space and limitations, and potential drivers of anuran geographic range limits, influencing our understanding of other ecological and evolutionary patterns and processes and enabling multispecies comparisons of potential risk and resilience in the face of climate change.

Copyright: © 2024 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.

Counts of adult thermal trait values found within the literature for 37 species of frogs and toads (anurans) within the southeastern United States. Species Pseudacris brimleyi, Pseudacris nigrita, and Pseudacris ocularis are not shown due to no trait values reported. States indicated in gray in the inset map of the conterminous United States are considered the southeastern United States for this database. Trait Name is ordered based on type of trait: warm colored traits are mass and physiological traits, and cool colored traits are behavioral traits. Physiological traits include critical thermal maximum (CTmax), critical thermal minimum (CTmin), and Tpref (preferred temperature). Behavioral traits include basking temperature (Tbask), foraging temperature limits (Tforage_min and Tforage_max), emergence temperature (Tmerge), and activity. An * indicates a species of conservation concern. Conservation status, as defined by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Red List, was determined on 15 August 2020 (International Union for Conservation of Nature, 2017).


Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.

Species’ thermal trait data, measured as sources with unique species and trait combinations (points), have increased since 1945.


Fig. 3.
Fig. 3.

Adult trait completeness, or number of traits with at least one trait value in the literature, varies among and within anuran genera (A) and families (B). Each y-axis is ordered by the group with the highest trait completion to group with the lowest trait completion. Points represent individual species. Boxplots indicate standard delineations of median, 25th, and 75th percentiles, and lines indicate the lesser of largest or smallest values or 1.5 times the interquartile range.


Fig. 4.
Fig. 4.

The number of traits with at least one trait value in the literature (trait completeness) increases with range size for adults (A) and for all life stages (B) for 37 anurans native to the southeastern United States. Maximum trait completeness is 9 for adults and 22 for all life stages. Each point represents a species that has at least one trait value in the TRAD database, with the symbol and shade in (B) representing the total number of life stages (egg/embryo, tadpole, metamorph, juvenile, and adults) with trait data.


Contributor Notes

 Department of Biological Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1015 Life Science Circle, Steger Hall 263E, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061; Email: (TPD) tracipdubose@gmail.com; (VC) vjc18@vt.edu; (CEM) chloe9mo@vt.edu; (JLD) j0essd@vt.edu; and (MCM) mims@vt.edu. Send correspondence to TPD.
 Department of Biology, Loyola Science Center, University of Scranton, Scranton, Pennsylvania 18510; ORCID: 0000-0001-6571-2015; Email: vincent.farallo@scranton.edu.
 U.S. Geological Survey, Science Analytics and Synthesis, W 6th Ave. Kipling St., Lakewood, Colorado 80225; ORCID: 0000-0002-4391-107X; Email: albenson@usgs.gov.
 Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1015 Life Science Circle, Steger Hall 245, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061; ORCID: 0000-0002-4437-1351; Email: hopkinsw@vt.edu.

Associate Editor: C. Bevier.

Received: 09 Dec 2022
Accepted: 15 Nov 2023
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