Abstract
Temperature was monitored in three natural nests, and oxygen and carbon
dioxide partial pressure monitored in one natural nest of the broad-shelled
river turtle, Chelodina expansa, throughout incubation.
Nest temperature decreased after nest construction in autumn, remained low
during winter and gradually increased in spring to a maximum in summer. In a
nest where temperature was recorded every hour, temperature typically
fluctuated through a 2°C cycle on a daily basis throughout the entire
incubation period, and the nest always heated faster than it cooled. Oxygen
and carbon dioxide partial pressures in this nest were similar to soil oxygen
and carbon dioxide partial pressures for the first 5 months of incubation, but
nest respiratory gas tensions deviated from the surrounding soil over the last
three months of incubation. Nest respiratory gas tensions were not greatly
different from those in the atmosphere above the ground except after periods
of rain. After heavy rain during the last 3 months of incubation the nest
became moderately hypoxic (PO2 ~ 100 Torr) and
hypercapnic (PCO 2 ~ 50 Torr) for several successive
days. These short periods of hypoxia and hypercapnia were not lethal.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
54 articles.
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