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Embryonic Growth Rate Thermal Reaction Norm of Mediterranean Caretta caretta Embryos from Two Different Thermal Habitats, Turkey and Libya

doi: 10.2744/ccb-1269.1
handle: 11499/8842
Abstract Ectothermic species are strongly affected by thermal changes. To assess the viability of these species under climate change constraints, we need to quantify the sensitivity of their life history traits to temperature. The loggerhead marine turtle (Caretta caretta) nests regularly in the Oriental Basin of the Mediterranean Sea. The different populations are separated because of time (< 12,000 yrs) and very different thermal habitats; it is hotter on the southern coast (Libya) than on the northern ones (Cyprus, Greece, and Turkey). Patterns of embryo growth response to incubation temperatures have been searched for these 2 populations. We found that both populations have similar thermal reaction norms for embryonic growth rate. This highlights that 12,000 yrs is not enough time for this species to adapt to specific thermal habitats and raises the question of the persistence of these populations in the context of rapid climate change.
- Pamukkale University Turkey
- Université Paris-Saclay France
- University of Tripoli Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
- University of Sfax Tunisia
- University of Paris-Saclay France
570, 590, temperature, sea turtles, phenotypic plasticity, embryonic development, loggerhead, Climate change
570, 590, temperature, sea turtles, phenotypic plasticity, embryonic development, loggerhead, Climate change
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