Background and Data
In this report, I set out to compare weight-length relationships of California tiger salamanders (Ambystoma californiense, CTS) across 2012 - 2024 trapping years and 9 different trapping sites. This analysis follows the methodology described by Derek H. Ogle as he describes in his blog post Weight-Length Relationship for 3+ Groups on his website Introductory Fisheries Analysis with R. Weight-Length relationships are often used in fisheries management to compare body condition across time, among habitats, among bodies of water, and among length categories (Ogle & Winfield, 2009). For this analysis, weights (grams) and total lengths (mm) were recorded from 1,714 CTS captured at nine sites within the Concord Naval Weapons Station in Concord, CA, between 2010 and 2024. The original data was collected in field notebooks and later transcribed into Excel spreadsheets (associated meta data is provided in the README.md
file within the data folder). The combined trapping data is stored in the dataframe cts
. Below are some photos of the trapping site, pitfall traps, CTS data collection, and a CTS relocation into the nearby breeding pond.