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Booth, D. T., Feeney, R., & Shibata, Y. (2012). Nest and maternal origin can influence morphology and locomotor performance of hatchling green turtles (chelonia mydas) incubated in field nests. Marine Biology, (online first). 
Added by: Sarina Wunderlich (18 Nov 2012 17:43:09 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1007/s00227-012-2070-y
BibTeX citation key: Booth2012
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Categories: General
Keywords: Chelonia, Chelonia mydas, Cheloniidae, Schildkröten = turtles + tortoises, Zeitigung = incubation
Creators: Booth, Feeney, Shibata
Collection: Marine Biology
Views: 7/635
Views index: 15%
Popularity index: 3.75%
Abstract     
In numerous laboratory experiments involving the incubation of reptile eggs, both the maternal origin of eggs and the incubating environment (nest effect) have been demonstrated to influence hatchling phenotype. Although different hatchling phenotypes have been reported from natural nests, the separate effects of maternal origin and nest on hatchling phenotype in natural nests have not been demonstrated because in natural nests the two effects are confounded with each other. Here, we use a split clutch design to experimentally separate nest effects from maternal origin effects in field nests of green turtles (Chelonia mydas). We found both maternal origin and nest to influence hatchling morphology and locomotor performance in some but not all field nests. By using egg mass (maternal origin effect) and nest temperature (nest effect) in multiple regression analysis, we found maternal origin had a greater influence than nest temperature on the morphological attributes of hatchling mass and carapace size, but nest temperature had a greater influence than maternal origin on the performance attributes of self-righting time, self-righting propensity, swim thrust during the first 30 min of swimming, and power stroke rate during the first 30 min of swimming.
Added by: Sarina Wunderlich  
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