Incubation temperature, energy expenditure and hatchling size in the green turtle (Chelonia mydas ), a species with temperature-sensitive sex determination
David T. Booth and Katherine Astill
Australian Journal of Zoology
49(4) 389 - 396
Published: 2001
Abstract
Eggs from the Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef, nesting population of green turtles (Chelonia mydas) were incubated at all-male-determining (26˚C) and all-female-determining (30˚C) temperatures. Oxygen consumption and embryonic growth were monitored throughout incubation, and hatchling masses and body dimensions were measured from both temperatures. Eggs hatched after 79 and 53 days incubation at 26˚C and 30˚C respectively. Oxygen consumption at both temperatures increased to a peak several days before hatching, a pattern typical of turtle embryos, and the rate of oxygen was higher at 30˚C than 26˚C. The total amount of energy consumed during incubation, and hatchling dimensions, were similar at both temperatures, but hatchlings from 26˚C had larger mass, larger yolk-free mass and smaller residual yolks than hatchlings from 30˚C. Because of the difference in mass of hatchlings, hatchlings from 30˚C had a higher production cost.https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO01006
© CSIRO 2001