Schwanz Lisa E, Janzen Fredric J
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2008 Nov-Dec;81(6):826-34. doi: 10.1086/590220.
Under temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD), temperatures experienced by embryos during development determine the sex of the offspring. Consequently, populations of organisms with TSD have the potential to be strongly impacted by climatic warming that could bias offspring sex ratio, a fundamental demographic parameter involved in population dynamics. Moreover, many taxa with TSD are imperiled, so research on this phenomenon, particularly long-term field study, has assumed great urgency. Recently, turtles with TSD have joined the diverse list of taxa that have demonstrated population-level changes in breeding phenology in response to recent climate change. This raises the possibility that any adverse impacts of climate change on populations may be alleviated by individual plasticity in nesting phenology. Here, we examine data from a long-term study on a population of painted turtles (Chrysemys picta) to determine whether changes in phenology are due to individual plasticity and whether individual plasticity in the timing of nesting has the capacity to offset the sex ratio effects of a rise in climatic temperature. We find that individual females show plasticity in the date of first nesting each year, and that this plasticity depends on the climate from the previous winter. First nesting date is not repeatable within individuals, suggesting that it would not respond to selection. Sex ratios of hatchlings within a nest declined nonsignificantly over the nesting season. However, small increases in summer temperature had a much stronger effect on nest sex ratios than did laying nests earlier in the season. For this and other reasons, it seems unlikely that individual plasticity in the timing of nesting will offset the effects of climate change on sex ratios in this population, and we hypothesize that this conclusion applies to other populations with TSD.
在温度依赖型性别决定(TSD)机制下,胚胎发育过程中所经历的温度决定了后代的性别。因此,具有TSD机制的生物种群有可能受到气候变暖的强烈影响,气候变暖可能会使后代性别比例出现偏差,而性别比例是种群动态中的一个基本人口统计学参数。此外,许多具有TSD机制的分类群都面临濒危,所以对这一现象的研究,尤其是长期的实地研究,已显得极为迫切。最近,具有TSD机制的海龟已加入到众多分类群的行列,这些分类群已证明其繁殖物候在种群水平上因近期气候变化而发生了变化。这就增加了一种可能性,即气候变化对种群的任何不利影响可能会通过筑巢物候的个体可塑性得到缓解。在这里,我们研究了一项针对彩龟(锦龟)种群的长期研究数据,以确定物候变化是否是由于个体可塑性所致,以及筑巢时间的个体可塑性是否有能力抵消气候温度上升对性别比例的影响。我们发现,个体雌龟每年首次筑巢的日期表现出可塑性,而且这种可塑性取决于前一个冬天的气候。首次筑巢日期在个体内部不具有重复性,这表明它不会对选择做出反应。在筑巢季节内,巢内幼龟的性别比例呈非显著下降趋势。然而,夏季温度的小幅升高对巢内性别比例的影响要比对在季节早期产卵强烈得多。基于这个以及其他原因,筑巢时间的个体可塑性似乎不太可能抵消气候变化对该种群性别比例的影响,并且我们推测这一结论也适用于其他具有TSD机制的种群。