Is the future female for turtles? Climate change and wetland configuration predict sex ratios of a freshwater species

Author:

Roberts H. Patrick1ORCID,Willey Lisabeth L.23,Jones Michael T.4,Akre Thomas S. B.5,King David I.6,Kleopfer John7,Brown Donald J.89,Buchanan Scott W.10,Chandler Houston C.1112,deMaynadier Phillip13,Winters Melissa14,Erb Lori15,Gipe Katharine D.16,Johnson Glenn17,Lauer Kathryn23,Liebgold Eric B.18,Mays Jonathan D.19,Meck Jessica R.45,Megyesy Joshua14,Mota Joel L.8,Nazdrowicz Nathan H.20,Oxenrider Kevin J.21,Parren Molly3,Ransom Tami S.22,Rohrbaugh Lindsay23,Smith Scott24,Yorks Derek13,Zarate Brian25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Conservation University of Massachusetts Amherst Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Environmental Studies Antioch University New England Keene New Hampshire USA

3. American Turtle Observatory New Salem Massachusetts USA

4. Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Program Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife Westborough Massachusetts USA

5. Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute Front Royal Virginia USA

6. U.S. Forest Service, Northern Research Station, Department of Environmental Conservation University of Massachusetts Amherst Massachusetts USA

7. Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources Charles City Virginia USA

8. U.S. Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station Amboy Washington USA

9. School of Natural Resources West Virginia University Morgantown West Virginia USA

10. Division of Fish and Wildlife Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management West Kingston Rhode Island USA

11. The Orianne Society Tiger Georgia USA

12. Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia USA

13. Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Augusta Maine USA

14. New Hampshire Fish and Game Department Concord New Hampshire USA

15. The Mid‐Atlantic Center for Herpetology and Conservation Oley Pennsylvania USA

16. Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission Bellefonte Pennsylvania USA

17. Biology Department State University of New York Potsdam New York USA

18. Department of Biological Sciences Salisbury University Salisbury Maryland USA

19. Fish and Wildlife Research Institute Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Gainesville Florida USA

20. Species Conservation and Research Program Delaware Division of Fish & Wildlife Delaware USA

21. West Virginia Division of Natural Resources Romney West Virginia USA

22. Environmental Studies Department Salisbury University Salisbury Maryland USA

23. District of Columbia Department of Energy & Environment Washington District of Columbia USA

24. Maryland Department of Natural Resources Maryland Wye Mills USA

25. New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife Lebanon New Jersey USA

Abstract

AbstractClimate change and land‐use change are leading drivers of biodiversity decline, affecting demographic parameters that are important for population persistence. For example, scientists have speculated for decades that climate change may skew adult sex ratios in taxa that express temperature‐dependent sex determination (TSD), but limited evidence exists that this phenomenon is occurring in natural settings. For species that are vulnerable to anthropogenic land‐use practices, differential mortality among sexes may also skew sex ratios. We sampled the spotted turtle (Clemmys guttata), a freshwater species with TSD, across a large portion of its geographic range (Florida to Maine), to assess the environmental factors influencing adult sex ratios. We present evidence that suggests recent climate change has potentially skewed the adult sex ratio of spotted turtles, with samples following a pattern of increased proportions of females concomitant with warming trends, but only within the warmer areas sampled. At intermediate temperatures, there was no relationship with climate, while in the cooler areas we found the opposite pattern, with samples becoming more male biased with increasing temperatures. These patterns might be explained in part by variation in relative adaptive capacity via phenotypic plasticity in nest site selection. Our findings also suggest that spotted turtles have a context‐dependent and multi‐scale relationship with land use. We observed a negative relationship between male proportion and the amount of crop cover (within 300 m) when wetlands were less spatially aggregated. However, when wetlands were aggregated, sex ratios remained consistent. This pattern may reflect sex‐specific patterns in movement that render males more vulnerable to mortality from agricultural machinery and other threats. Our findings highlight the complexity of species' responses to both climate change and land use, and emphasize the role that landscape structure can play in shaping wildlife population demographics.

Funder

Natural Resources Conservation Service

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference85 articles.

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3. Nesting movements and the use of anthropogenic nesting sites by spotted turtles (Clemmys guttata) and Blanding's turtles (Emydoidea blandingii);Beaudry F.;Herpetological Conservation and Biology,2010

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5. Effects of urbanization on the population structure of freshwater turtles across the United States

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