Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 2016

Evaporative Water Loss Rates of Four Species of Aquatic Turtles from the Coastal Plain of the Southeastern United States

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Page Range: 457 – 463
DOI: 10.1670/15-124
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Abstract

Many isolated wetlands in the southeastern United States are naturally ephemeral, productive habitats that can support a high diversity of aquatic reptiles. As wetlands begin to dry, reptile species exhibit different behavioral responses including overland dispersal and terrestrial aestivation. Regardless of strategy, one of the greatest risks to individual survival is desiccation. We measured evaporative water loss rates (EWL; % body mass lost per hour) and total % body mass lost over 24 h in four species of semiaquatic turtles that frequent isolated wetlands in the southeastern United States: Chicken Turtles (Deirochelys reticularia), Eastern Mud Turtles (Kinosternon subrubrum), Common Musk Turtles (Sternotherus odoratus), and Yellow-Bellied Sliders (Trachemys scripta scripta). Mean percent body mass lost over 24 h ranged from 4.44–10.26% among individuals, was negatively correlated with body mass and varied among species, with higher EWL rates occurring in species with reduced shell robustness (the amount of the body covered by the shell). Mean EWL rates were highest in S. odoratus, lowest in K. subrubrum, and intermediate in D. reticularia and T. scripta. The EWL rates corresponded to species' natural history traits and behavioral adaptations to drought. Species with higher EWL rates could be more vulnerable to increased drought duration and frequency resulting from either climate change or anthropogenic modification of wetland hydrology, and easily measured traits such as shell robustness and body mass may be useful in predicting EWL rates and desiccation risk for particular age classes and other species of turtles.

Copyright: Copyright 2016 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles 2016
<sc>Fig</sc>
. 1.
Fig . 1.

Plastron morphology of Sternotherus odoratus (left) and Kinosternon subrubrum (right) showing differences in relative skin exposure. Photograph by Chris M. Murphy.


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Fig . 2.

Location of Savannah River Site (SRS) and Phinizy Swamp Nature Park; both are near the border shared by South Carolina and Georgia, USA.


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Fig . 3.

Average percent body mass lost at each time interval for S. odoratus (n = 18), D. reticularia (n = 4), T. scripta (n = 19), and K. subrubrum (n = 25).


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. 4.
Fig . 4.

Relationship between EWL rate, mass, and shell robustness. Shading denotes shell robustness (white = 1, gray = 2, black = 3).


Contributor Notes

Corresponding author. E-mail: chrismurphy618@gmail.com
Accepted: 10 Feb 2016
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