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Archives of The Cold Blooded News

The Newsletter of the Colorado Herpetological Society

Volume 32, Number 6;   June, 2005

 

Deformed Frogs Are Less of a Mystery

Did Triassic Monster Use Suction to Feed?

Sister Group Relationship of Turtles to the Bird-Crocodilian Clade Revealed by Nuclear DNA­Coded Proteins

Fish and Wildlife Service Proposes the American Crocodile in Florida be Downlisted from Endangered to Threatened

Airport Pays Millions to Buy Snake Habitat; Feds Levied Penalty for Filling Wetlands

Trends in Sex Ratios of Turtles in the United States: Implications of Road Mortality

Search for a Shy Serpent

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Trends in Sex Ratios of Turtles in the United States: Implications of Road Mortality

James P. Gibbs & David A. Steen

State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry,
350 Illick Hall, 1 Forestry Drive, Syracuse, New York 13210 (jpgibbs@syr.edu)

NEWS RELEASE from The Center for North American Herpetology, Lawrence, Kansas, http://www.cnah.org, 7 April 2005.
Originally from Conservation Biology 19(2): 552-556 (April 2005).

Abstract: Road mortality has been implicated as a significant demographic force in turtles, particularly for females, which are killed disproportionately on overland nesting movements. Moreover, the United States' road network has expanded dramatically over the last century. We therefore predicted that historical trends in sex ratios of turtle populations would be male biased. To test this prediction, we synthesized published estimates of population-level sex ratios in freshwater and terrestrial turtles in the United States (165 estimates for 36 species, published 1928-2003). Our analysis suggests that the proportion of males in populations has increased linearly (p= 0.001); the trend in male bias is synchronized with the expansion of the surfaced portion of the road network since 1930; sex ratios became more male biased in states with higher densities of roads; and populations have become more male biased in aquatic species, in which movement differentials between males and females are greatest, and are least biased in semiaquatic and terrestrial species, in which overland movements are more comparable between sexes. Our results suggest an ongoing depletion of breeding females from wild turtle populations over the last century because of many factors, including, and perhaps chiefly, road mortality.

A copy of this article can be downloaded gratis by visiting the CNAH PDF Library at http://www.cnah.org/cnah_pdf.asp


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