City dwellers: habitat connectivity and demographic responses of a semi-aquatic turtle in Australia

Bruno de Oliveira Ferronato, Anke Maria Hoefer, Isobel Booksmythe, Rod Ubrihien, Arthur Georges

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Urbanization and fragmentation of habitat are major drivers of population declines in wildlife in cities. This study evaluated fragmentation of aquatic systems in the context of urbanization, using the Eastern long-necked turtle Chelodina longicollis as a model as it is a generalist species, highly vagile and engages in regular overland migration. During two seasons (2020-22), we compared C. longicollis demography in stormwater ponds in two distinct urban drainages, one with greater habitat connectivity (lower road network and an unmodified creek) and one with lower habitat connectivity (higher road network and stormwater drains) in Canberra, south-eastern Australia. Most of the parameters related to habitat (pond age and size) and food requirements (phosphate and prey biomass) for C. longicollis were similar between the two drainages, in addition to proportion of females, overall size-frequency distributions and population size (corrected for variation in capture probability). However, there was a significant effect of the interaction between pond habitat connectivity and pond size with population sizes increasing more steeply in higher than in lower connectivity sites (F1, 4 = 14.3, p = 0.02). We also recaptured a marked turtle from a previous study in the drainage with more habitat connectivity, 14 years later and 15 km from its initial point of capture. This demonstrates the ability of the species to move within an urbanized context. Despite evidence of C. longicollis being resilient to urbanization, dispersal constraints seem to affect population dynamics and long term population viability in areas with low habitat connectivity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2201-2212
Number of pages12
JournalUrban Ecosystems
Volume27
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

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