Maternal diet influences fecundity in a freshwater turtle undergoing population decline

Author:

Petrov Kristen1,Van Dyke James U2ORCID,Georges Arthur3,Keitel Claudia4,Spencer Ricky-John1

Affiliation:

1. Hawkesbury Institute, Western Sydney University Locked Bag School of Science, , 1797, Penrith South DC, NSW 2751, Australia

2. La Trobe University, Albury-Wodonga Campus Centre for Freshwater Ecosystems, Department of Environment and Genetics, School of Agriculture, Biomedical and Environment, , PO Box 821, Wodonga, VIC 3689, Australia

3. University of Canberra Institute for Applied Ecology, , 11 Kirinari Street,Bruce, ACT 2601, Australia

4. University of Sydney School of Life and Environmental Sciences, , 380 Werombi Road, Brownlow Hill, NSW 2570, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Food availability determines the amount of energy animals can acquire and allocate to reproduction and other necessary functions. Female animals that are food limited thus experience reduced energy available for reproduction. When this occurs, females may reduce frequency of reproductive events or the number or size of offspring per reproductive bout. We assessed how maternal diet affects reproductive output in adult female Murray River short-necked turtles, Emydura macquarii, from four wetlands in Victoria. We previously found that turtle diets differ in the composition of plants and animals between our study wetlands. In this study, we tested whether differences in turtle diet composition (i.e. plants and animals) at these wetlands were associated with differences in clutch mass, individual egg mass, bulk egg composition and hatching success. We found total clutch mass increased with maternal body size at each site. At sites where filamentous green algae were scarce and E. macquarii were carnivorous, females produced smaller clutches relative to body size compared to females from sites where algae were abundant, and turtles were more herbivorous. Individual egg mass, bulk egg composition and hatching success did not differ across wetlands. Isotopic analysis revealed significant positive relationships between the carbon and nitrogen isotopes (δ13C, δ15N) of the eggs and those of the mothers, indicating that mothers allocated ratios of carbon and nitrogen isotopes to their eggs similar to those present in their tissues. Our study suggests that at sites where females are more carnivorous due to a relative absence of algae, females produce smaller clutches, but other aspects of their reproduction are not significantly impacted. The reduction in clutch size associated with differences in the availability of dietary plants and animals may have long-term consequences for E. macquarii and other freshwater turtle species that are experiencing population declines.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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