Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 03 Sept 2009

Core Terrestrial Habitat Around Wetlands: Contributions from the Spatial Ecology of the Redbelly Watersnake (Nerodia erythrogaster erythrogaster)

Page Range: 556 – 562
DOI: 10.1643/CE-07-245
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Abstract

Terrestrial habitats around wetlands are important in wetland conservation because many vertebrate animals use them during part of their life cycle. There is relatively little information concerning terrestrial habitat use by aquatic snakes adjacent to wetlands. Radiotelemetry was used to study the spatial ecology and terrestrial habitat use of Nerodia e. erythrogaster in the upper coastal plain of northern South Carolina. Snakes used terrestrial habitats extensively during the summer and fall. Use of both wetlands and southern mixed hardwood forest were significantly greater than predicted by habitat availability within the snakes' home ranges. Agricultural fields were used significantly less than predicted. A distance of 344 m from wetlands is necessary to encompass 95% of the terrestrial localities documented in this study. Home range estimates based on 95% fixed kernels were significantly larger than those calculated using the 95% minimum convex polygon methods. Home range estimates for this species are comparable to those of large terrestrial colubrids and are greater than home range estimates reported for congeners. Snakes spent an average of about ten days out of wetlands during terrestrial movements with a maximum of 23 consecutive days spent out of a wetland. These results suggest that in excess of 300 m of forest habitat buffering wetlands may be necessary to sustain populations of N. erythrogaster.

Copyright: 2009 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Fig. 1
Fig. 1

Pee Dee Research and Education Center, Darlington Co., South Carolina, bordered by the heavy black line. Animals were radio-tracked in three areas. Area A is a sequence of six artificial ponds, area B is the swamp, and area C is a barrow pit. The bar in the lower left-hand corner is 800 m. The lake to the right of A and B is Dargan's Pond, and the Great Pee Dee River borders PDREC on the upper right.


Fig. 2
Fig. 2

Frequency distribution of the distances (m) of terrestrial locations for 12 Nerodia e. erythrogaster at PDREC in the upper coastal plain of South Carolina. Only distances of 10 m or more from the wetland edge were considered terrestrial (n  =  325 observations). Drainage ditches were not considered wetlands; therefore, locations in ditches were considered terrestrial and are included in this data set.


Fig. 3
Fig. 3

Frequency distribution of the number of consecutive days spent out of wetlands for 12 Nerodia e. erythrogaster at PDREC in the upper coastal plain of South Carolina from 2001–2005 (n  =  70 observations).


Contributor Notes

Associate Editor: J. W. Snodgrass.

Department of Biology, Francis Marion University, Florence, South Carolina 29506; E-mail: jcamper@fmarion.edu.
Received: 16 Nov 2007
Accepted: 25 Mar 2009
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