Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.

Captive rearing and reintroduction / translocation are increasingly used as tools to supplement wild populations of threatened species. Reintroducing captive-reared Chinese giant salamanders may help to augment the declining wild populations and conserve this critically endangered amphibian. We rele...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lu Zhang, Wei Jiang, Qi-Jun Wang, Hu Zhao, Hong-Xing Zhang, Ruth M Marcec, Scott T Willard, Andrew J Kouba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4892505?pdf=render
_version_ 1819110543934357504
author Lu Zhang
Wei Jiang
Qi-Jun Wang
Hu Zhao
Hong-Xing Zhang
Ruth M Marcec
Scott T Willard
Andrew J Kouba
author_facet Lu Zhang
Wei Jiang
Qi-Jun Wang
Hu Zhao
Hong-Xing Zhang
Ruth M Marcec
Scott T Willard
Andrew J Kouba
author_sort Lu Zhang
collection DOAJ
description Captive rearing and reintroduction / translocation are increasingly used as tools to supplement wild populations of threatened species. Reintroducing captive-reared Chinese giant salamanders may help to augment the declining wild populations and conserve this critically endangered amphibian. We released 31 captive-reared juvenile giant salamanders implanted with VHF radio transmitters at the Heihe River (n = 15) and the Donghe River (n = 16) in the Qinling Mountains of central China. Salamanders were monitored every day for survival from April 28th 2013 to September 3rd 2014. We attempted to recapture all living individuals by the end of the study, measured their body mass and total body length, and checked for abnormalities and presence of external parasites. Two salamanders at the Heihe River and 10 animals at the Donghe River survived through the project timeline. Nine salamanders were confirmed dead, while the status of the other 10 animals was undetermined. The annual survival rate of giant salamanders at the Donghe River (0.702) was 1.7-fold higher than that at the Heihe River (0.405). Survival increased as individuals were held longer following surgery, whereas body mass did not have a significant impact on survival rate. All salamanders recaptured from the Donghe River (n = 8) increased in mass (0.50 ± 0.13 kg) and length (5.5 ± 1.5 cm) after approximately 11 months in the wild, and they were only 7% lighter than wild animals of the same length (mean residual = -0.033 ± 0.025). Our results indicate that captive-reared Chinese giant salamanders can survive in the wild one year after release and adequate surgical recovery time is extremely important to post-release survival. Future projects may reintroduce older juveniles to achieve better survival and longer monitoring duration.
first_indexed 2024-12-22T03:43:24Z
format Article
id doaj.art-b63647fe54e24c6394fcbbb6c5452df5
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-22T03:43:24Z
publishDate 2016-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-b63647fe54e24c6394fcbbb6c5452df52022-12-21T18:40:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01116e015671510.1371/journal.pone.0156715Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.Lu ZhangWei JiangQi-Jun WangHu ZhaoHong-Xing ZhangRuth M MarcecScott T WillardAndrew J KoubaCaptive rearing and reintroduction / translocation are increasingly used as tools to supplement wild populations of threatened species. Reintroducing captive-reared Chinese giant salamanders may help to augment the declining wild populations and conserve this critically endangered amphibian. We released 31 captive-reared juvenile giant salamanders implanted with VHF radio transmitters at the Heihe River (n = 15) and the Donghe River (n = 16) in the Qinling Mountains of central China. Salamanders were monitored every day for survival from April 28th 2013 to September 3rd 2014. We attempted to recapture all living individuals by the end of the study, measured their body mass and total body length, and checked for abnormalities and presence of external parasites. Two salamanders at the Heihe River and 10 animals at the Donghe River survived through the project timeline. Nine salamanders were confirmed dead, while the status of the other 10 animals was undetermined. The annual survival rate of giant salamanders at the Donghe River (0.702) was 1.7-fold higher than that at the Heihe River (0.405). Survival increased as individuals were held longer following surgery, whereas body mass did not have a significant impact on survival rate. All salamanders recaptured from the Donghe River (n = 8) increased in mass (0.50 ± 0.13 kg) and length (5.5 ± 1.5 cm) after approximately 11 months in the wild, and they were only 7% lighter than wild animals of the same length (mean residual = -0.033 ± 0.025). Our results indicate that captive-reared Chinese giant salamanders can survive in the wild one year after release and adequate surgical recovery time is extremely important to post-release survival. Future projects may reintroduce older juveniles to achieve better survival and longer monitoring duration.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4892505?pdf=render
spellingShingle Lu Zhang
Wei Jiang
Qi-Jun Wang
Hu Zhao
Hong-Xing Zhang
Ruth M Marcec
Scott T Willard
Andrew J Kouba
Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.
PLoS ONE
title Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.
title_full Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.
title_fullStr Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.
title_full_unstemmed Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.
title_short Reintroduction and Post-Release Survival of a Living Fossil: The Chinese Giant Salamander.
title_sort reintroduction and post release survival of a living fossil the chinese giant salamander
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4892505?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT luzhang reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander
AT weijiang reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander
AT qijunwang reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander
AT huzhao reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander
AT hongxingzhang reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander
AT ruthmmarcec reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander
AT scotttwillard reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander
AT andrewjkouba reintroductionandpostreleasesurvivalofalivingfossilthechinesegiantsalamander