Alvin L. Braswell’s research while affiliated with North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and other places

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Publications (4)


FIG. 1. Amphibian quality assessment index (AQAI) values for amphibian communities in four types of wetland. Ref = reference. Data from Gianopulos et al. (2016).
FIG. 2. Values and site ranks on 16 wetland sites over a 3-yr study for amphibian quality assessment index (AQAI) versus species richness; dots in top graph represent index values in a given year at a given site. Sites were ranked from one to 16, from highest AQAI to lowest. Data from Gianopulos et al. (2016).
A New Database for Facilitating Evaluation of Wetland and Aquatic Amphibian Communities in North Carolina
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2022

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66 Reads

Journal of North Carolina Academy of Science

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Alvin L. Braswell

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Nathan A. Shepard

Wetland condition assessment is often performed by land managers, federal and local governments, and conservation organizations to document current condition and potentially take action to protect or restore valuable wetland resources. These condition assessments often include data collection or surveys of biotic communities such as vegetation, macroinvertebrate, and amphibian communities. Assessment tools for gauging quality of these communities are needed to allow scientists to understand overall condition. To facilitate a better understanding of amphibian communities found in wetlands and associated habitat quality, we created ratings of anthropogenic disturbance sensitivity for wetland and aquatic amphibian species in North Carolina. With adequate surveys of amphibian communities, these ratings can be input into an index of amphibian wetland habitat quality for North Carolina wetlands, the Amphibian Quality Assessment Index (AQAI). Comparison of the AQAI against amphibian species richness in a three-year study in 16 wetlands showed the two indices to be correlated but not strongly so. The AQAI has the advantage of providing additional habitat quality information beyond indices based solely on species richness and abundance

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Citations (2)


... In 2015, the first in-depth study on green salamander pathogen prevalence was conducted in southwestern Virginia and documented an 8% prevalence for ranavirus and 15% prevalence for Bd . Two other studies, one in North Carolina and one in South Carolina, demonstrated similar results, showing low prevalence of disease in their respective states (Moffitt et al. 2015;Newman et al. 2019;Lentz et al. 2021). Because some species are resilient to certain pathogens, infection does not always lead to disease. ...

Reference:

Conservation Action Plan Green Salamander (Aneides aeneus) Species Complex
Prevalence of Ranavirus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, B. salamandrivorans, and Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola in Amphibians and Reptiles of North Carolina, USA
  • Citing Article
  • June 2021

Herpetological Review

... La succión es una falacia, ya que la absorción del veneno es inmediata y no ha sido demostrada su utilidad en humanos. 2,[21][22][23][24][25] No es recomendable tratar de identificar el tipo de serpiente después de muerta por gente no experta, ya que se puede sufrir otra mordedura. Algunos autores reportan que al tratar de recoger las cabezas de serpientes decapitadas han vuelto a morder cuando se tratan de manipular. ...

Venomous Snakes of North Carolina