Here comes the sun: Thermoregulatory behavior in ectotherms illuminated by light‐level geolocators

Author:

Otten J. G.12ORCID,Clifton I. T.23ORCID,Becker D. F.4,Refsnider J. M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Cornell College Mount Vernon IA USA

2. Department of Environmental Sciences University of Toledo Toledo OH USA

3. Department of Biology University of Arkansas at Little Rock Little Rock AR USA

4. HerpMapper Muscatine IA USA

Abstract

AbstractDaily activity patterns of free‐ranging wildlife affect a wide range of ecological and physiological processes and, in turn are affected by anthropogenic disturbances to the environment. However, obtaining a continuous record of activity without disturbing wild animals is logistically challenging. We used commercially available, multi‐purpose light‐level geolocator dataloggers to continuously record light environment and time spent out of water during 5‐months (1 May to 9 September 2021) in an ectothermic freshwater turtle species, the northern map turtle (Graptemys geographica). We used these data to compare time of year and sex differences in thermoregulatory behavior in an ectothermic species in its natural habitat. We recorded >500 000 data points from 17 individual turtles (nine males and eight females). We found no differences in the mean light levels, or proportion of time spent out of the water, between males and females. However, there was a significant effect of both time of year and sex by time of year interaction in both light level, proportion of time spent dry, and number of state changes (i.e., shuttling behavior, wet to dry or dry to wet), suggesting that turtles alter their aerial basking behavior over the course of the season and that the changes in patterns of aerial basking behavior differ between the sexes throughout the year. In general, the proportion of time spent dry decreased over the active season, with an increase during the last week of June and the first week of July, while the number of state changes increased in females during late May/early June before decreasing, while males remained relatively constant. These changes may reflect the different energetic demands associated with reproduction between the two sexes. The overall downward trend in aerial basking likely reflects the role of increasing environmental temperatures, particularly water temperature, in the maintenance of body temperature in this largely aquatic species.

Funder

College of Graduate Studies, University of Toledo

Publisher

Wiley

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