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The morphological effects of artificial light at night on amphibian predators and prey are masked at the community level
Artificial light at night changes body shapes of amphibian predators and prey but these changes are hidden when looking at the whole community
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Abstract
Spring peepers exposed to artificial light at night (ALAN) were significantly darker than those raised under control conditions.
- Wood frogs reared in ALAN conditions were significantly smaller than those in control conditions.
- Eastern newts collected in spring showed increased size when exposed to ALAN, but later collections were unaffected, indicating potential timing differences in impact.
- Predation assays revealed that size disparities in wood frogs from ALAN exposure were eliminated due to size-selective predation.
- No cascading community-level effects on predation rates were detected despite individual-level changes in pigmentation and size resulting from ALAN.
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