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Can a present-day thermal niche be preserved in a warming climate by a shift in phenology? A case study with sea turtles

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-21, 03:49 authored by JO Laloë, Graeme HaysGraeme Hays
How species respond to climate change may impact their extinction probability. Here we link climatology and ecology to tackle a globally important conservation question. For sea turtles, there are concerns that climate warming will cause both the feminization of populations as well as reduced hatchling survival. For 58 nesting sites across the world spanning all seven sea turtle species, we investigated whether warming might be avoided by shifts in nesting phenology to a cooler part of the year. We show that even with the most extreme phenological shift that has been reported to date-an 18-day advance in nesting per °C increase in sea surface temperature (SST)-temperatures will continue to increase at nesting sites with climate warming. We estimate that SST at nesting sites will rise by an average of 0.6°C (standard deviation = 0.9°C, n = 58) when we model a 1.5°C rise in SST combined with a best-case-scenario shift in nesting. Since sea turtles exhibit temperature-dependent sex determination, these temperature rises could lead to increasingly female-biased sex ratios as well as reduced hatchling production at sites across the world. These findings underscore concerns for the long-Term survival of this iconic group.

History

Journal

Royal Society Open Science

Volume

10

Pagination

221002-

Location

England

ISSN

2054-5703

eISSN

2054-5703

Language

en

Issue

2

Publisher

The Royal Society

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