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Filters: Tags: {"type":"Harvest Set"} (X) > partyWithName: Brian J Halstead (X) > Types: Citation (X)

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California Red-legged Frogs (Rana draytonii) are typically regarded as inhabitants of permanent ponds, marshes, and slow-moving streams, but their ecology in other habitats, including coastal dunes, remains obscure. To avoid and minimize potential negative effects of dune restoration activities, we studied the spatial ecology, habitat selection, and survival of California Red-legged Frogs in coastal dune drainages at Point Reyes National Seashore, California. Frogs remained in their home drainages throughout the summer, and, with some notable exceptions, most remained close to water. Home ranges of California Red-legged Frogs in dunes were generally small, and they selected areas near water with logs that served...
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These data are multi-state capture histories of 273 individual San Francisco gartersnakes collected at a site before and after a portion of the site was burned. Data collection began in 2008 and continued until 2013, and the prescribed fire was applied in the fall of 2010. These data support the following paper: Halstead, B. J., Thompson, M. E., Amarello, M. , Smith, J. J., Wylie, G. D., Routman, E. J. and Casazza, M. L. (2018), Effects of prescribed fire on San Francisco gartersnake survival and movement. Jour. Wild. Mgmt.. . doi:10.1002/jwmg.21585


    map background search result map search result map California Red-Legged Frogs in Point Reyes Coastal Dune Drainages (2015) Coastal California San Francisco Gartersnake Capture-Mark-Recapture Data (2008-2013) California Red-Legged Frogs in Point Reyes Coastal Dune Drainages (2015) Coastal California San Francisco Gartersnake Capture-Mark-Recapture Data (2008-2013)