hays-longterm-1999.pdf (239.35 kB)
Long-term thermal conditions on the nesting beaches of green turtles on Ascension Island
journal contribution
posted on 1999-08-20, 00:00 authored by Graeme HaysGraeme Hays, B Godley, A BroderickOn 2 of the major nesting beaches used by green turtles Chelonia mydas on Ascension Island, we measured the sand temperature at nest depths throughout the year. For both beaches, the sand temperature was strongly correlated (r2 >= 0.94) with air temperature. We therefore used past records of air temperature to reconstruct sand temperatures on the different beaches throughout the nesting season between 1985 and 1998. This analysis showed that inter-annual differences in sand temperature were small and, while there were consistent thermal changes during the nesting season, over the 14 yr there was little overlap in the temperatures on the 2 beaches, with one being 2.6°C warmer, on average, than the other. This work suggests that inter-beach thermal variation is the major mechanism by which a range of incubation temperatures are realised on Ascension Island and hence is likely to facilitate the production of hatchlings of both sexes.
History
Journal
Marine ecology progress seriesVolume
185Pagination
297 - 299Publisher
Inter-ResearchLocation
Oldendorf, GermanyISSN
0171-8630eISSN
1616-1599Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
1999, Inter-ResearchUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
sea turtleChelonia mydasincubation temperaturetemperature-dependent sex determinationAscension IslandScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicinePhysical SciencesEcologyMarine & Freshwater BiologyOceanographyEnvironmental Sciences & Ecologytemperature-dependent sex determination Ascension IslandCHELONIA-MYDASSEA TURTLESZoologyOceanographyEcology
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