Influence of Moisture, Temperature, and Substrate on Snapping Turtle Eggs and Embryos
1987
Packard, Gary C. | Packard, Mary J. | Miller, Kirk | Boardman, Thomas J.
Flexible—shelled eggs of common snapping turtles (Chelydra serpentina) were incubated on two substrates (sand and vermiculite) at each of three temperatures (26.0°, 28.5°, 31.0°C) and three moisture regimes (water potentials initially —150 kPa, —550 kPa, —950 kPa) in a factorial experiment assessing the influence of these variables on the water relations of eggs and the development of embryos. Hatching success was high on wet substrates at 26.0° and 28.5°, but declined at the highest temperature and on drier media. Net absorption of water by viable eggs, duration of incubation by embryos, and size of hatchlings, were positively correlated with wetness of substrates and negatively correlated with temperature. Turtles hatching from eggs at 26.0° were males regardless of the wetness of the medium, whereas those emerging form eggs at 28.5°and 31.0° were females. These patterns of response characterized eggs incubated on sand as well as those on vermiculite. Findings from this study indicate that temporal and spatial variations in moisture and temperature within and among natural nests probably elicit ecologically important variation in size and sex of hatchling snapping turtles.
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