Publication | Closed Access
Climate Warming and Calling Phenology of Frogs near Ithaca, New York, 1900–1999
230
Citations
13
References
2001
Year
BiologyRange ShiftEngineeringClimate WarmingNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologySeasonal TimingZoogeographyEnvironmental BiologyEcophysiologyCalling PhenologyPhenologyNew YorkAmbient TemperaturePopulation EcologyConservation BiologyClimate Change
Abstract: Because ambient temperature strongly influences reproduction in frogs, the seasonal timing of frog calling provides a sensitive index of biotic response to climate change. Over the last century, daily temperatures increased during 5 of the 8 months key to gametogenesis in frogs and toads near Ithaca, New York ( U.S.A.). Earliest dates of calling frogs recorded by Albert Hazen Wright between 1900 and 1912 near Ithaca were compared to those from the New York State Amphibian and Reptile Atlas Project for 1990–1999 for the three counties surrounding Ithaca. Four species are now calling 10–13 days earlier, two are unchanged, and none is calling later. The data suggest that climate has warmed in central New York State during this century and has resulted in earlier breeding in some amphibians—a possible first indication of biotic response to climate change in eastern North America.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1