Amphibian mortality levels on Spanish country roads: descriptive and spatial analysis.

Road-kills are the greatest source of direct human-induced wildlife mortality, especially in amphibians. Country roads could act as the most important source of mortality when main roads act as strong barriers hampering the migration movements of some species. Mortality patterns of amphibians on country roads (1380 km) were studied in Salamanca (Spain) in order to quantify the mortality levels, to test the effects of sex and age factors on road-kills, to determine the spatial distribution patterns of road-kills, and to identify routes of migration through a friction map and hotspots of road-kills. From a total of 819 records of amphibians, 38.1% were road-killed and 61.9% were live. Fourteen amphibian species were recorded during the surveys (10 anurans and four urodeles). The species more affected by road-kills were the anurans Bufo calamita, Pelobates cultripes and B. bufo (38.5, 23.4 and 11.9%, respectively …

Data and Resources

Cite as

Sillero N. Amphibian mortality levels on Spanish country roads: descriptive and spatial analysis. Brill, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1163/156853808785112066

Clipboard Icon
Retrieved: 20 Jan 2025 20:47:26

Metadata

Basic information
Resource type Text
Date of creation 2024-12-02
Date of last revision 2025-01-20
Show changelog
Metadata identifier ce293889-8d27-5ec8-ab02-dc067891ff0a
Metadata language Spanish
Themes (NTI-RISP)
High-value dataset category
ISO 19115 topic category
Keyword URIs
Bibliographic information
Name of the dataset creator Sillero, N.
Name of the dataset editor Brill
Other identifier DOI: 10.1163/156853808785112066
Identifier of the dataset creator
Email of the dataset creator
Website of the dataset creator
Provenance
Lineage statement
Metadata Standard
Version notes
Version