Abstract

Warming global temperatures are predicted to reduce population viability in many oviparous ectothermic taxa, with increased embryonic mortality likely to be a main cause. While research on embryonic upper thermal limits is extensive, sea turtle hatchling thermal tolerance has received less attention and our understanding of how incubation conditions influence hatchling thermal tolerance is limited. Here, we report green turtle Chelonia mydas hatchling hydration and thermal tolerance following incubation in dry and wet conditions. We used packed cell volume and total protein as indicators of hydration and measured the critical thermal maximum (CTmax) of hatchlings in air. Neither hydration nor thermal tolerance was directly influenced by moisture treatment. However, hatchlings from moister nests had longer incubation durations (wet: 60.11 d vs. dry: 54.86 d), and, using incubation duration as a proxy for incubation temperature, hatchlings from cooler nests had significantly lower CTmax (wet: 39.84°C vs. dry: 40.51°C). Thus, despite not directly influencing thermal tolerance, moisture treatment influenced nest temperature indirectly; hatchlings that experienced warmer conditions in dry nests had a higher thermal tolerance than hatchlings from cooler and wetter nests. Ectothermic neonates may have greater plasticity in their thermal tolerance than previously thought, but their ability to adapt to increasing temperature is likely limited. Additionally, common management techniques to reduce nest temperatures, such as watering and shading nests, may only reduce embryonic mortality at the cost of decreased hatchling thermal tolerance and increased hatchling mortality during emergence. Nesting-site management interventions designed to reduce embryonic mortality will need to consider mitigation of the possible effects of those interventions on hatchling mortality.

Highlights

  • Environmental factors, such as temperature, moisture, oxygen concentration and salinity, influence multiple traits and phenotypes in a variety of taxa (Caut et al 2010, Bower et al 2013)

  • The aim of this study was to measure the response of sea turtle hatchling hydration and thermal tolerance to moisture concentrations during incubation

  • It is possible that in our study, we observed no response of hatchling hydration and thermal tolerance to moisture treatment because our treatments did not induce a large enough change in egg water content

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental factors, such as temperature, moisture, oxygen concentration and salinity, influence multiple traits and phenotypes in a variety of taxa (Caut et al 2010, Bower et al 2013) These effects can be long lasting (Elphick & Shine 1998, Freedberg et al 2004), and when environmental conditions affect large enough areas of a species’ nesting habitat, these environmental factors can significantly affect species at the population level (Santidrián Tomillo et al 2012, Booth et al 2020). Developing embryos experience considerable temporal variation in incubation conditions, in addition to spatial variation in the microclimate within the nest (Wallace et al 2004). Many studies have investigated temperature effects, showing that warmer nests produce higher

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