Abstract

Global atmospheric temperatures are predicted to rapidly increase within the next hundred years, consequently altering the microclimates of the sand dune environment where marine turtles lay their eggs. High nest temperatures can increase embryonic mortality, decrease hatchling vigour and size (i.e. quality), and also feminises the sex-ratio of clutches. Sand composition, vegetation cover, rainfall and sun exposure affect the temperature of sand surrounding a nest, however the effect of this variability in the beach environment on the incubation success of a sea turtle clutch is still relatively unknown. We conducted a manipulative study on loggerhead turtle nests at Mon Repos, Queensland, Australia, to investigate the effect of ground-cover vegetation vs bare sand and tree-shade vs no shade on incubation success, hatchling morphology and hatchling locomotor performance. Twenty-four nests were used in a two-factor experimental design, with tree-shade/sun and, ground-cover vegetated/cleared as fixed factors. Sun-exposed nests experienced higher nest temperatures (∼2 °C warmer), shorter incubation periods and poorer incubation success than those in tree-shade. Ground-cover-vegetated nests in tree-shade had lower hatching and emergence success (73%, 66% respectively) than sun-exposed nests placed in sites cleared of ground-cover vegetation (79%, 83% respectively). Hatchlings that emerged from cooler, tree-shaded nests were also larger and crawled faster than hatchlings from sun-exposed nests. We suggest for conservation projects on naturally ‘hot’ beaches, active management strategies such as selective groundcover vegetation removal and increased shading could be implemented to increase high quality hatchling production.

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