Freshwater Turtle Assemblages and Densities in Agricultural Ditches and Aquaculture Ponds of Eastern Arkansas
Abstract
The Mississippi Alluvial Plain (MAP) of Arkansas is a landscape where many wetlands have been altered for use as aquaculture ponds or agricultural ditches. Commercial harvest of freshwater turtles within the MAP is not restricted or limited, with reported harvest numbers for 2019 alone exceeding 4000 for spiny softshell turtles (Apalone spinifera) and 39,000 for red-eared sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans). Herein, we attempt to provide baseline estimates of freshwater turtle densities and community composition in aquaculture ponds and agricultural ditches of eastern Arkansas, the habitat types most frequently trapped by commercial harvesters. We used a capture–mark–recapture approach over 3 summers (2019–2021) to evaluate population densities and community composition of freshwater turtles in these anthropogenic aquatic habitats. We captured > 4000 individuals of 9 species of turtle. One species, the red-eared slider, dominated the turtle community in both anthropogenic aquatic habitats, comprising 66% (± 22% SD) of all captures in agricultural ditches and 63% (± 32% SD) in aquaculture ponds. Diversity and richness did not differ between aquaculture ponds and agricultural ditches. We estimated densities of the 2 most commonly captured species, the red-eared slider and spiny softshell turtle. Density of red-eared sliders ranged from 0 turtles/unit area (linear kilometers in ditches or hectares in ponds) to 500 turtles/unit area, with a median of 37 turtles/unit area. The spiny softshell turtle was more frequently captured in ponds than ditches and attained average densities of 25 (± 19) turtles/ha and 7 (± 4) turtles/linear km, respectively. Our mean density estimates were lower than those in reported literature, including estimates from similar habitats, such as urban ditches and farm ponds, which resemble our study sites in structure, use, and geographical placement. We estimate the region contains 22,317 ha of aquaculture ponds and 18,350 linear km of agricultural ditches. By extrapolating our density estimates to each anthropogenic aquatic habitat type, we estimated 2 million red-eared sliders and 427,000 spiny softshell turtles occurred in aquaculture ponds and agricultural ditches across eastern Arkansas. Our results suggest that these altered wetlands provide abundant habitat for only a few generalist turtle species.
Contributor Notes
Handling Editor: Peter V. Lindeman