Publication | Closed Access
Effects of Roads on the Structure of Freshwater Turtle Populations
279
Citations
31
References
2004
Year
Breeding BehaviorHigh Road DensityWildlife EcologyEvolutionary BiologyRoad MortalitySkewed Sex RatiosFreshwater Turtle PopulationsWildlife BiologyPopulation Ecology
Abstract: Road mortality has the potential to alter the structure of turtle populations because turtle populations are highly sensitive to additive sources of adult mortality. To address the issue, we captured painted turtles ( Chrysemys picta ; n = 174) and snapping turtles ( Chelydra serpentina ; n = 56) in 18 wetlands surrounded by low road density (≤1.5 km roads/km 2 of landscape) and 17 wetlands surrounded by high road density (>1.5 km/km 2 ) in central New York in 2002. High road density was associated with male‐biased sex ratios in painted turtles (74% vs. 54% males; p = 0.01) and snapping turtles (95% vs. 74% males; p = 0.08), whereas turtle morphology and abundance were not associated with road density. Disproportionate road mortality of females on nesting migrations is the most likely cause of skewed sex ratios.
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