2013
DOI: 10.1890/12-1588.1
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A mechanism that maintains alternative life histories in a loggerhead sea turtle population

Abstract: Intrapopulation variation in habitat use is commonly seen among mobile animals, yet the mechanisms maintaining it have rarely been researched among untrackable species. To investigate how alternative life histories are maintained in a population of the loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta), cumulative reproductive output was evaluated and compared between small planktivores inhabiting oceanic areas (with water depths > 200 m) and large benthivores inhabiting neritic areas (depths < 200 m) that sympatrically … Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(96 citation statements)
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“…Although the differential habitat use caused a 2.4-fold greater reproductive output for neritic than oceanic foragers in a Japanese loggerhead population (Hatase et al 2013), the two foragers were not genetically distinct at neutral markers such as the 350-base-pair sequences of the mitochondrial DNA control region and five microsatellite loci (Watanabe et al 2011), suggesting that the alternative phenotypes are maintained by a strategy possibly depending on growth conditions during oceanic early life (Hatase et al 2013). However, alternative phenotypes sometimes have a genetic basis even if neutral markers, due to insufficient resolution, fail to detect genetic structure.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Although the differential habitat use caused a 2.4-fold greater reproductive output for neritic than oceanic foragers in a Japanese loggerhead population (Hatase et al 2013), the two foragers were not genetically distinct at neutral markers such as the 350-base-pair sequences of the mitochondrial DNA control region and five microsatellite loci (Watanabe et al 2011), suggesting that the alternative phenotypes are maintained by a strategy possibly depending on growth conditions during oceanic early life (Hatase et al 2013). However, alternative phenotypes sometimes have a genetic basis even if neutral markers, due to insufficient resolution, fail to detect genetic structure.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…The Yakushima Sea Turtle Research Group has been conducting ongoing, annual tagging surveys of nesting turtles at this site since 1985 (Yakushima Sea Turtle Research Group 2011; Hatase et al 2013). We identified individual female loggerheads by external plastic tags (MultiFlex P, Caisley, Bocholt, Germany) placed on both the front and rear flippers, and an internal tag (ID-100, Trovan, East Yorkshire, UK) inserted into the left front flipper; alternatively, previously existing tags were used for identification.…”
Section: Surveys Of Nesting Females and Relocation Of Their Clutchesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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