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Refsnider, J. M., Warner, D. A., & Janzen, F. J. (2013). Does shade cover availability limit nest-site choice in two populations of a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination? Journal of Thermal Biology, (in press, accepted manuscript). 
Added by: Admin (06 Jan 2014 18:23:06 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtherbio.2013.01.003,
BibTeX citation key: Refsnider2013
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Categories: General
Keywords: Chrysemys picta, Emydidae, Fortpflanzung - reproduction, Habitat - habitat, Nordamerika - North America, Schildkröten - turtles + tortoises, Zeitigung - incubation
Creators: Janzen, Refsnider, Warner
Collection: Journal of Thermal Biology
Views: 4/634
Views index: 16%
Popularity index: 4%
Abstract     
Chrysemys picta Shifts in resource use may be an important mechanism by which organisms can adjust to novel environmental conditions, such as those imposed by climate change. However, for such shifts to be possible, environmental space must exist into which organisms can move. Habitat that ensures successful survival and reproduction is one such critical resource. We studied resource selection of shade cover over nest sites by painted turtles in populations in Illinois (center of range) and New Mexico (southern edge of range). We targeted this habitat feature because shade can influence hatching success and offspring phenotype (including sex in the study species) by affecting nest microenvironments. We found that while turtles in both populations selected nest sites that were shadier than average available sites, overall resource selection differed between the populations. This disparity may have been due to differences in structure of vegetation that provides shade at each site, because areas with high shade cover in New Mexico (low dense thickets) were much more difficult for turtles to access than those in Illinois (dense tree canopy cover). Further, shade cover predicted different parameters of incubation regime at each site, suggesting that turtles must assess dissimilar components of shade cover in order to choose nest sites and predict their future incubation regimes. Our results suggest that shade cover within nesting areas is a key component of painted turtle habitat, and that accessible, highly-shaded nest sites may be limited at the New Mexico site. Maintaining a range of shade cover from which turtles can select nest sites would permit plasticity in nest-site choice to be expressed, which may be important in preventing sex ratio skews due to climate change.
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