University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Chesapeake Biological Laboratory, 146 Williams Street, P.O. Box 38, Solomons, MD, 20688, USA.
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Chesapeake Biological Laboratory, 146 Williams Street, P.O. Box 38, Solomons, MD, 20688, USA.
J Therm Biol. 2020 Feb;88:102528. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2020.102528. Epub 2020 Feb 4.
As global temperatures continue to rise, so too will the nest temperatures of many species of turtles. Yet for most turtle species, including the estuarine diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin), there is limited information on embryonic sensitivity to elevated temperature. We incubated eggs of M. terrapin at three, mean temperatures (31, 34, 37 °C) under two thermal exposure regimes (constant or semi-naturally fluctuating temperature) and measured hatching success, developmental rate, and hatchling size. Hatching success was 100% at 31 °C and 67% at 34 °C, respectively; at 37 °C, all eggs failed early in the incubation period. These values were unaffected by exposure regime. The modeled LT (temperature that was lethal to 50% of the test population) was 34.0 °C in the constant and 34.2 °C in the fluctuating thermal regime, reflecting a steep decline in survival between 33 and 35 °C. Hatchlings having been incubated at a constant 34 °C hatched sooner than those incubated at 31 °C under either constant or fluctuating temperature. Hatchlings were smaller in straight carapace length (CL) and width after having been incubated at 34 °C compared to 31 °C. Larger (CL) hatchlings resulted from fluctuating temperature conditions relative to constant temperature conditions, regardless of mean temperature. Based upon recent temperatures in natural nests, the M. terrapin population studied here appears to possess resiliency to several degrees of elevated mean nest temperatures, beyond which, embryonic mortality will likely sharply increase. When considered within the mosaic of challenges that Maryland's M. terrapin face as the climate warms, including ongoing habitat losses due to sea level rise and impending thermal impacts on bioenergetics and offspring sex ratios, a future increase in embryonic mortality could be a critical factor for a population already experiencing ecological and physiological challenges due to climate change.
随着全球气温持续升高,许多海龟物种的巢穴温度也将升高。然而,对于大多数海龟物种,包括河口玳瑁(Malaclemys terrapin)在内,关于胚胎对高温的敏感性的信息有限。我们在两种热暴露条件(恒定或半自然波动温度)下,将 M. terrapin 的卵在三个平均温度(31、34、37°C)下孵化,并测量孵化成功率、发育速度和幼龟大小。在 31°C 时孵化成功率为 100%,在 34°C 时孵化成功率为 67%;在 37°C 时,所有卵在孵化早期都失败了。这些值不受暴露条件的影响。在恒定和波动热条件下,模型化的 LT(导致测试种群 50%死亡的温度)分别为 34.0°C 和 34.2°C,反映了在 33 和 35°C 之间存活率的急剧下降。在恒定 34°C 下孵化的幼龟比在恒定或波动温度下孵化的 31°C 下孵化的幼龟孵化得更早。与在 31°C 下孵化的幼龟相比,在 34°C 下孵化的幼龟的甲壳长(CL)和宽度更小。与恒定温度条件相比,波动温度条件下孵化出的幼龟(CL)更大,而与平均温度无关。根据自然巢中的最近温度,研究中的 M. terrapin 种群似乎对几度升高的平均巢温具有恢复力,超出这个范围,胚胎死亡率可能会急剧增加。在马里兰州的 M. terrapin 随着气候变暖而面临的马赛克挑战中考虑到这一点,包括由于海平面上升导致的栖息地持续丧失以及对生物能量学和后代性别比例的即将到来的热影响,胚胎死亡率的增加可能是一个关键因素对于一个已经因气候变化而面临生态和生理挑战的种群来说。