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      Impact of land reclamation and agricultural water regime on the distribution and conservation status of the endangered Dryophytes suweonensis

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          Abstract

          Knowledge about the distribution and habitat preferences of a species is critical for its conservation. The Suweon Treefrog ( Dryophytes suweonensis) is an endangered species endemic to the Republic of Korea. We conducted surveys from 2014 to 2016 at 890 potentially suitable sites across the entire range of the species in South Korea. We then assessed whether D. suweonensis was found in the current and ancestral predicted ranges, reclaimed and protected areas, and how the presence of agricultural floodwater affected its occurrence. Our results describe a 120 km increase in the southernmost known distribution of the species, and the absence of the species at lower latitudes. We then demonstrate a putative constriction on the species ancestral range due to urban encroachment, and provide evidence for a significant increase in its coastal range due to the colonisation of reclaimed land by the species. In addition, we demonstrate that D. suweonensis is present in rice fields that are flooded with water originating from rivers as opposed to being present in rice fields that are irrigated from underground water. Finally, the non-overlap of protected areas and the occurrence of the species shows that only the edge of a single site where D. suweonensis occurs is legally protected. Based on our results and the literature, we suggest the design of a site fitting all the ecological requirements of the species, and suggest the use of such sites to prevent further erosion in the range of D. suweonensis.

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          Most cited references37

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          Assessing Extinction Threats: Toward a Reevaluation of IUCN Threatened Species Categories

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            Presumed domestication? Evidence for wild rice cultivation and domestication in the fifth millennium BC of the Lower Yangtze region

            Prompted by a recent article by Jiang and Liu in Antiquity (80, 2006), Dorian Fuller and his co-authors return to the question of rice cultivation and consider some of the difficulties involved in identifying the transition from wild to domesticated rice. Using data from Eastern China, they propose that, at least for the Lower Yangtze region, the advent of rice domestication around 4000 BC was preceded by a phase of pre-domestication cultivation that began around 5000 BC. This rice, together with other subsistence foods like nuts, acorns and waterchestnuts, was gathered by sedentary hunter-gatherer-foragers. The implications for sedentism and the spread of agriculture as a long term process are discussed.
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              Phylogenetics, classification, and biogeography of the treefrogs (Amphibia: Anura: Arboranae).

              A phylogenetic analysis of sequences from 503 species of hylid frogs and four outgroup taxa resulted in 16,128 aligned sites of 19 genes. The molecular data were subjected to a maximum likelihood analysis that resulted in a new phylogenetic tree of treefrogs. A conservative new classification based on the tree has (1) three families composing an unranked taxon, Arboranae, (2) nine subfamilies (five resurrected, one new), and (3) six resurrected generic names and five new generic names. Using the results of a maximum likelihood timetree, times of divergence were determined. For the most part these times of divergence correlated well with historical geologic events. The arboranan frogs originated in South America in the Late Mesozoic or Early Cenozoic. The family Pelodryadidae diverged from its South American relative, Phyllomedusidae, in the Eocene and invaded Australia via Antarctica. There were two dispersals from South America to North America in the Paleogene. One lineage was the ancestral stock of Acris and its relatives, whereas the other lineage, subfamily Hylinae, differentiated into a myriad of genera in Middle America.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                peerj
                peerj
                PeerJ
                PeerJ Inc. (San Francisco, USA )
                2167-8359
                4 October 2017
                2017
                : 5
                : e3872
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Laboratory of Behavioral Ecology and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University , Seoul, South Korea
                [2 ]Division of EcoScience, Ewha Women’s University , Seoul, South Korea
                [3 ]College of Natural Science, Sangmyung University , Seoul, South Korea
                [4 ]Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences , Warsaw, Poland
                [5 ]Interdisciplinary Program of EcoCreative, Ewha Women’s University , Seoul, South Korea
                Article
                3872
                10.7717/peerj.3872
                5631092
                ef795d4d-d428-4af7-924c-4d54f54c99a6
                ©2017 Borzée et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.

                History
                : 13 June 2017
                : 9 September 2017
                Funding
                Funded by: The Biodiversity Foundation
                Funded by: National Research Foundation of Korea
                Award ID: #2017R1A2B2003579
                Funded by: National Geographic Asia
                Award ID: # 2-2016-1632-001-1
                This project was supported by three Small Grants for Science and Conservation in 2014, 2015 and 2016 from The Biodiversity Foundation to Amaël Borzée. The project was also funded by a Research Grant from the National Research Foundation of Korea (#2017R1A2B2003579) and a research Grant from National Geographic Asia (# 2-2016-1632-001-1) to Yikweon Jang. There was no additional external funding received for this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
                Categories
                Conservation Biology
                Ecology
                Biosphere Interactions

                dryophytes suweonensis,range,land reclamation,protected area,ecological preferences,hylid,korea

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