Authors
Graeme C Hays, Antonios D Mazaris, Gail Schofield, Jacques-Olivier Laloë
Publication date
2017/2/8
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
284
Issue
1848
Pages
20162576
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
For species with temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) there is the fear that rising temperatures may lead to single-sex populations and population extinction. We show that for sea turtles, a major group exhibiting TSD, these concerns are currently unfounded but may become important under extreme climate warming scenarios. We show how highly female-biased sex ratios in developing eggs translate into much more balanced operational sex ratios so that adult male numbers in populations around the world are unlikely to be limiting. Rather than reducing population viability, female-biased offspring sex ratios may, to some extent, help population growth by increasing the number of breeding females and hence egg production. For rookeries across the world (n = 75 sites for seven species), we show that extreme female-biased hatchling sex ratios do not compromise population size and are the norm, with …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
GC Hays, AD Mazaris, G Schofield, JO Laloë - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological …, 2017