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Climate change overruns resilience conferred by temperature‐dependent sex determination in sea turtles and threatens their survival
Author(s) -
Santidrián Tomillo Pilar,
Genovart Meritxell,
Paladino Frank V.,
Spotila James R.,
Oro Daniel
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/gcb.12918
Subject(s) - climate change , fecundity , population , biology , ecology , nest (protein structural motif) , global warming , turtle (robot) , psychological resilience , environmental science , range (aeronautics) , population decline , demography , psychology , biochemistry , materials science , sociology , habitat , composite material , psychotherapist
Temperature‐dependent sex determination (TSD) is the predominant form of environmental sex determination (ESD) in reptiles, but the adaptive significance of TSD in this group remains unclear. Additionally, the viability of species with TSD may be compromised as climate gets warmer. We simulated population responses in a turtle with TSD to increasing nest temperatures and compared the results to those of a virtual population with genotypic sex determination (GSD) and fixed sex ratios. Then, we assessed the effectiveness of TSD as a mechanism to maintain populations under climate change scenarios. TSD populations were more resilient to increased nest temperatures and mitigated the negative effects of high temperatures by increasing production of female offspring and therefore, future fecundity. That buffered the negative effect of temperature on the population growth. TSD provides an evolutionary advantage to sea turtles. However, this mechanism was only effective over a range of temperatures and will become inefficient as temperatures rise to levels projected by current climate change models. Projected global warming threatens survival of sea turtles, and the IPCC high gas concentration scenario may result in extirpation of the studied population in 50 years.