Arid
EFFECTS OF ARTIFICIAL RAIN ON SURVIVORSHIP, BODY CONDITION, AND GROWTH OF HEAD-STARTED DESERT TORTOISES (GOPHERUS AGASSIZII) RELEASED TO THE OPEN DESERT
Nagy, Kenneth A.1; Hillard, Scott1; Dickson, Stephanie1; Morafka, David J.2
通讯作者Nagy, Kenneth A.
来源期刊HERPETOLOGICAL CONSERVATION AND BIOLOGY
ISSN2151-0733
EISSN1931-7603
出版年2015
卷号10期号:1页码:535-549
英文摘要

We subjected neonate Desert Tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) that hatched inside fenced, predator-resistant field enclosures containing natural vegetation to either a natural rainfall regime or a regime of natural rainfall plus irrigation (supplemental precipitation) over a five-year period, to test the hypothesis that mimicking an above-average rainfall regime in years of average or low natural rainfall will improve rates of survival and growth. We also tested the hypothesis that survivorship of released 1-yr olds will be high, due to a decline in predation susceptibility once the vulnerable nesting and hatchling phases are completed. Survivorship inside the enclosures during the first year of life was high (averaging 90%) in both groups, even during a record low rainfall year, but growth rates were always substantially higher (2 to 16-x greater) in rain-supplemented juveniles. Body condition index (CI) measurements indicated that first-year juveniles without added rain were able to maintain body conditions similar to rain-supplemented juveniles during two average rainfall years, but not during a drought year. Older juveniles without added rain died during the latter part of the 16 mo drought, suggesting that the high drought survivorship of first-year non-supplemented juveniles may be related to the yolk they carried after hatching, along with possible behavioral and physiological differences. Nearly all yearlings that were set free (in autumn) were dead within 6 mo, regardless of whether they had supplemental rain or not during their first year inside enclosures, and regardless of whether they were released near the head-start enclosures or a kilometer away. The main cause of mortality was predation, primarily by ravens. The poor survival of released yearling tortoises and the drought-induced death of nearly all older captive juveniles raised without added precipitation lead us to recommend that rain supplementation and delayed release be incorporated in the protocol for head-starting Desert Tortoises.


英文关键词conservation growth rate irrigation effect predation
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000360373100034
WOS关键词RESPIRATORY-TRACT DISEASE ; MOJAVE DESERT ; CALIFORNIA ; SURVIVAL
WOS类目Zoology
WOS研究方向Zoology
来源机构University of California, Los Angeles
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/187641
作者单位1.Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA;
2.Calif Acad Sci, San Francisco, CA 94118 USA
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GB/T 7714
Nagy, Kenneth A.,Hillard, Scott,Dickson, Stephanie,et al. EFFECTS OF ARTIFICIAL RAIN ON SURVIVORSHIP, BODY CONDITION, AND GROWTH OF HEAD-STARTED DESERT TORTOISES (GOPHERUS AGASSIZII) RELEASED TO THE OPEN DESERT[J]. University of California, Los Angeles,2015,10(1):535-549.
APA Nagy, Kenneth A.,Hillard, Scott,Dickson, Stephanie,&Morafka, David J..(2015).EFFECTS OF ARTIFICIAL RAIN ON SURVIVORSHIP, BODY CONDITION, AND GROWTH OF HEAD-STARTED DESERT TORTOISES (GOPHERUS AGASSIZII) RELEASED TO THE OPEN DESERT.HERPETOLOGICAL CONSERVATION AND BIOLOGY,10(1),535-549.
MLA Nagy, Kenneth A.,et al."EFFECTS OF ARTIFICIAL RAIN ON SURVIVORSHIP, BODY CONDITION, AND GROWTH OF HEAD-STARTED DESERT TORTOISES (GOPHERUS AGASSIZII) RELEASED TO THE OPEN DESERT".HERPETOLOGICAL CONSERVATION AND BIOLOGY 10.1(2015):535-549.
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