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Warner, D. A., & Mitchell, T. S. (2012). Does maternal oviposition site influence offspring dispersal to suitable habitat? Oecologia, (epub. ahead of print). 
Added by: Admin (06 Jan 2014 18:23:14 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-012-2533-3
BibTeX citation key: Warner2012
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Categories: General
Keywords: Chrysemys picta, Emydidae, Fortpflanzung - reproduction, Habitat - habitat, Nordamerika - North America, Schildkröten - turtles + tortoises
Creators: Mitchell, Warner
Collection: Oecologia
Views: 7/603
Views index: 15%
Popularity index: 3.75%
Abstract     
Orientation and dispersal to suitable habitat affects fitness in many animals, but the factors that govern these behaviors are poorly understood. In many turtle species, hatchlings must orient and disperse to suitable aquatic habitat immediately after emergence from subterranean nests. Thus, the location of nest sites relative to aquatic habitats ideally should be associated with the direction of hatchling dispersal. At our study site, painted turtles (Chrysemys picta) nest to the west (on an island) and east (on the mainland) of a wetland, which determines the direction that hatchlings must travel to reach suitable aquatic habitat. To determine if hatchling orientation is intrinsically influenced by the location where their mothers nest, we employed a two-part cross-fostering experiment in the field, whereby half the eggs laid in mainland nests were swapped with half the eggs laid in island nests. Moreover, because C. picta hatchlings overwinter inside their nests, we performed a second cross-fostering experiment to fully decouple the effects of (1) the maternally chosen nest location, (2) the embryonic developmental location, and (3) the overwinter location. We released hatchlings into a circular arena in the field and found that turtles generally dispersed in a westerly direction, regardless of the maternally chosen nest location and independent of the locations of embryonic development and overwintering. Although this westerly direction was towards suitable aquatic habitat, we could not distinguish whether naïve hatchling turtles (i) use environmental cues/stimuli to orient their movement, or (ii) have an intrinsic bias to orient west in the absence of stimuli. Nevertheless, these findings suggest that the orientation behavior of naïve hatchling turtles during terrestrial dispersal is not dependent upon the location of maternally-chosen nest sites.
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