极端环境对玳瑁体型和繁殖量的影响

A. Mobaraki, A. D. Phillott, Malihe Erfani, M. Ghasemi, Hossein Jafari
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本研究首次公布了来自波斯湾北部伊朗群岛的筑巢玳瑁(Eretmochelys imbricata)及其蛋的形态测量学数据,以及每窝蛋黄蛋和无蛋黄蛋的数量。我们发现,在4个主要筑巢岛之间,一些变量存在显著差异(例如,蛋黄蛋重,p = 0.000;每窝无蛋黄蛋数(p = 0.017),但效应大小为中等或以下(r < 0.5或d < 0.8)。每窝蛋的直径(p = 0.039)、重量(p = 0.028)和蛋黄数(p = 0.000)随壳长(CCL)的增加而显著增加,但仅对蛋黄数的影响较大(f2 = 0.152)。无蛋黄蛋数与CCL无关(p = 0.453),与蛋黄蛋数无关(p = 0.523)。一项对全球玳瑁形态计量学和繁殖产量的meta分析显示,CCL (p = 0.000)和蛋黄蛋数(p < 0.001)存在显著差异,筑巢区域对这两个变量的影响都非常大(g2 = 0.880和0.616)。来自海湾的玳瑁比阿曼湾(p < 0.001)、阿拉伯海(p = 0.000)、加勒比海(p = 0.000)、西大西洋(p = 0.000)和西南太平洋(p = 0.000)的种群要小,但不包括红海(p = 0.104);产的蛋黄蛋比加勒比(p < 0.001)和西大西洋(p = 0.001)的种群要少,但不包括红海(p = 0.636)。这可能是由于在海湾筑巢的玳瑁在筑巢后仍留在其水域内,因此成年的体型受到相对较差的觅食栖息地和/或成功和/或极端环境的限制,随后限制了卵窝的大小。要得出关于玳瑁在红海筑巢的类似结论,还需要更多关于其活动范围和觅食栖息地的信息。在海湾、红海和阿拉伯海筑巢的玳瑁每窝产的无蛋黄蛋也比世界上其他种群的多(平均值= 17.6±10.8 SD[范围= 0-59])。在极端环境下的浅巢中,无蛋黄蛋的功能作用,可能在可容忍的条件下维持热和水条件,需要进一步研究。同样,在北印度洋筑巢的其他海龟物种中,无蛋黄蛋适应极端筑巢环境的可能性也值得研究。
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Inferred Impacts of Extreme Environments on Hawksbill Turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) Body Size and Reproductive Output
Abstract. This study presents the first published data on the morphometrics of nesting hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) and their eggs and counts of yolked and yolkless eggs per clutch from Iranian Islands in the northern Persian Gulf. We found significant variation in some variables among 4 main nesting islands (e.g., weight of yolked eggs, p = 0.000; number of yolkless eggs per clutch, p = 0.017), but effect size was moderate or less (r < 0.5 or d < 0.8). The diameter (p = 0.039), weight (p = 0.028), and number of yolked eggs (p = 0.000) per clutch increased significantly with curved carapace length (CCL), but the effect size was only large for the number of yolked eggs (f2 = 0.152). The number of yolkless eggs did not vary with CCL (p = 0.453) or with the number of yolked eggs (p = 0.523). A meta-analysis of global hawksbill turtle morphometrics and reproductive output revealed significant variation in CCL (p = 0.000) and number of yolked eggs (p < 0.001), with nesting region having a very large effect size on both variables (g2 = 0.880 and 0.616, respectively). Hawksbill turtles from the Gulf were smaller than populations from the Gulf of Oman (p < 0.001), Arabian Sea (p = 0.000), Caribbean (p = 0.000), West Atlantic (p = 0.000), and Southwest Pacific (p = 0.000) but not the Red Sea (p = 0.104), and laid fewer yolked eggs than populations in the Caribbean (p < 0.001) and West Atlantic (p = 0.001) but not the Red Sea (p = 0.636). This may be due to hawksbill turtles nesting in the Gulf remaining within its waters postnesting so adult body size is restricted by the relatively poor foraging habitat and/or success and/or the extreme environments, subsequently limiting clutch size. More information on home range and foraging habitat is required to draw similar conclusions about hawksbill turtles nesting in the Red Sea. Hawksbill turtles nesting in the Gulf, Red Sea, and Arabian Sea also appear to lay larger number of yolkless eggs per clutch than other populations worldwide (mean = 17.6 ± 10.8 SD [range = 0–59]). The functional role of yolkless eggs, potentially in the maintenance of thermal and hydric conditions within tolerable conditions in shallow nests laid in extreme environments, requires further investigation. Similarly, the potential for yolkless eggs to be an adaptation to extreme nest environments in other sea turtle species also nesting in the northern Indian Ocean also warrants examination.
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