Allen Camryn D, Robbins Michelle N, Eguchi Tomoharu, Owens David W, Meylan Anne B, Meylan Peter A, Kellar Nicholas M, Schwenter Jeffrey A, Nollens Hendrik H, LeRoux Robin A, Dutton Peter H, Seminoff Jeffrey A
Marine Mammal and Turtle Division, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, La Jolla, California, United States of America.
Grice Marine Lab, University of Charleston South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 14;10(10):e0138861. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0138861. eCollection 2015.
Determining sex ratios of endangered populations is important for wildlife management, particularly species subject to sex-specific threats or that exhibit temperature-dependent sex determination. Sea turtle sex is determined by incubation temperature and individuals lack external sex-based traits until sexual maturity. Previous research utilized serum/plasma testosterone radioimmunoassays (RIA) to determine sex in immature/juvenile sea turtles. However, there has been a growing application of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for wildlife endocrinology studies, but no study on sea turtles has compared the results of ELISA and RIA. This study provides the first sex ratio for a threatened East Pacific green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) foraging aggregation, a critical step for future management of this species. Here, we validate a testosterone ELISA and compare results between RIA and ELISA of duplicate samples. The ELISA demonstrated excellent correspondence with the RIA for providing testosterone concentrations for sex determination. Neither assay proved reliable for predicting the sex of reproductively active females with increased testosterone production. We then applied ELISA to examine the sex ratio of 69 green turtles foraging in San Diego Bay, California. Of 45 immature turtles sampled, sex could not be determined for three turtles because testosterone concentrations fell between the ranges for either sex (females: 4.1-113.1 pg/mL, males: 198.4-2,613.0 pg/mL) and these turtles were not subsequently recaptured to enable sex determination; using a Bayesian model to predict probabilities of turtle sex we predicted all three 'unknowns' were female (> 0.86). Additionally, the model assigned all turtles with their correct sex (if determined at recapture) with 100% accuracy. Results indicated a female bias (2.83F:1M) among all turtles in the aggregation; when focusing only on putative immature turtles the sex ratio was 3.5F:1M. With appropriate validation, ELISA sexing could be applied to other sea turtle species, and serve as a crucial conservation tool.
确定濒危种群的性别比例对于野生动物管理至关重要,尤其是对于那些面临特定性别威胁或具有温度依赖性性别决定的物种。海龟的性别由孵化温度决定,个体在性成熟之前没有基于性别的外部特征。先前的研究利用血清/血浆睾酮放射免疫分析(RIA)来确定未成熟/幼年海龟的性别。然而,酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)在野生动物内分泌学研究中的应用越来越广泛,但尚未有关于海龟的研究比较ELISA和RIA的结果。本研究提供了受威胁的东太平洋绿海龟(蠵龟)觅食聚集区的首个性别比例,这是该物种未来管理的关键一步。在这里,我们验证了一种睾酮ELISA,并比较了重复样本的RIA和ELISA结果。ELISA在提供用于性别鉴定的睾酮浓度方面与RIA表现出极好的一致性。两种测定方法都不能可靠地预测睾酮分泌增加的繁殖活跃雌性的性别。然后,我们应用ELISA来检测在加利福尼亚州圣地亚哥湾觅食的69只绿海龟的性别比例。在采样的45只未成熟海龟中,有3只海龟的性别无法确定,因为它们的睾酮浓度落在了任一性别的范围内(雌性:4.1 - 113.1 pg/mL,雄性:198.4 - 2,613.0 pg/mL),并且这些海龟随后没有被重新捕获以进行性别鉴定;使用贝叶斯模型预测海龟性别的概率,我们预测所有三只“未知”海龟均为雌性(> 0.86)。此外,该模型以100%的准确率为所有海龟(如果在重新捕获时确定)分配了正确的性别。结果表明,聚集区所有海龟中存在雌性偏差(2.83雌性:1雄性);仅关注假定的未成熟海龟时,性别比例为3.5雌性:1雄性。经过适当验证后,ELISA性别鉴定可应用于其他海龟物种,并成为一种关键的保护工具。