Authors
Meghan A Castelli, Arthur Georges, Caitlin Cherryh, Dan F Rosauer, Stephen D Sarre, Isabella Contador‐Kelsall, Clare E Holleley
Publication date
2021
Journal
Diversity and Distributions
Volume
27
Issue
3
Pages
427-438
Description
Aim
Species with temperature‐dependent sex determination (TSD) are particularly vulnerable to climate change because a resultant skew in population sex ratio can have severe demographic consequences and increase vulnerability to local extinction. The Australian central bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps) has a thermosensitive ZZ male/ZW female system of genetic sex determination (GSD). High incubation temperatures cause reversal of the ZZ genotype to a viable female phenotype. Nest temperatures in the wild are predicted to vary on a scale likely to produce heterogeneity in the occurrence of sex reversal, and so we predict that sex reversal will correlate positively with inferred incubation conditions.
Location
Mainland Australia.
Methods
Wild‐caught specimens of P. vitticeps vouchered in museum collections and collected during targeted field trips were genotypically and phenotypically sexed to …
Total citations
2020202120222023202411212101
Scholar articles