Studying any
animal in the wild is hard enough, let alone one that spends 30 years at a time
out at sea. Because of its ocean-faring lifestyle, scientists know next to nothing about the life style of
the critically endangered hawksbill sea
turtle, save for the fleeting observations they make when female turtles
come to beaches to lay their eggs.
Karl Phillips,
University of East Anglia Because sea turtles live far
out to sea, little has been understood about their breeding habits until now.
Genetics,
however, is giving researchers a glimpse into the sex lives of these elusive
creatures — and insight into their preservation.
“People have
looked at turtle mating systems before, but not at any depth,” said David S. Richardson, a molecular ecologist
at the University of East Anglia in Britain . “The trouble is that it’s
very hard because most of what happens happens far out at sea.”
Hawksbill
turtles live in warm waters throughout the world, starting their lives as
hatchlings on tropical shores. Female turtles lay up to five clutches of around
200 eggs every three years. Once the baby turtles break free of their sandy
cradles, only the females will ever return to dry land. Sometimes, that first
return visit takes three decades or more.
As for what
happens in between, researchers could only guess at whether females mate with
single or multiple males — whether a handful opportunistic alpha males surround
beaches to monopolize mating, or males compete for females that then chose the
most robust candidate. “All we see is the females coming and laying nests,” Dr.
Richardson said.
Dr.
Richardson, working with Karl Phillips, a doctoral candidate, and other
colleagues, decided to pull back the curtain on the turtles’ mating patterns by
reconstructing paternal genotypes. Comparing DNA between mother and offspring
can provide roundabout insights into a father’s genetic identify. To fill in
the missing male piece, the researchers took genetic samples from 53 females
and 1,600 hatchlings from 85 nests from the Seychelles ,
which lie in the Indian Ocean off East Africa .
Genetic
material in hand, they used a powerful microsatellite array — an analysis of
unique repeating sequences of DNA — to identify the number of males that sired
the females’ young.
Surprisingly,
the researchers found that more than 90 percent of females mated with a single
male, and the remaining four females mated with just two males each, they
report in the journal Molecular Ecology.
Over all, the
researchers determined that 47 males fathered the baby turtles, and none of
them mated with more than one female that visited the beach. Comparing the
males’ genetics revealed no patterns indicating that females choose the most
genetically impressive or compatible mates, suggesting that females may just
mate with the first male that turns up when the time is right.
“We were very surprised
at this level of monogamy,” Dr. Richardson said. “To put it mildly, monogamy is
the exception, not the rule, in the animal world.”
The females
achieved this reproductive feat with sperm storage, a trick that many animal
species rely upon in which females store sperm after mating for future
fertilization. In the case of the hawksbill turtles, females store sperm for up
to 75 days, an impressive length of time, to make it last throughout the
duration of their egg-laying period.
By storing
enough sperm to get through a full breeding season, females can avoid the
hassle of dealing with other males after that first encounter. “Females
separate having to mate with having to fertilize eggs in space and time,” Dr.
Richardson said. “Basically, they can get on with it and lay their eggs in
peace.”
Beyond
shedding light on fundamental turtle biology, the findings also present good
news for conservation. In follow-up work in which they examined mating patterns
across multiple years, the researchers found evidence suggesting that females
mate with new males each reproductive season.
Because every
female mates with a different male and switches males between years, the
researchers can safely assume that male populations are plentiful, at least in
the Seychelles .
They also
found a significant amount of genetic diversity within their samples, which
gives animal populations the evolutionary flexibility to respond to new
environmental challenges, such as disease.
Like most sea
turtle species, hawksbill turtles are hunted around the world for their shells
and meat, and to poach their eggs. Sea turtles become entangled in pollution or
snared by fishing lines, and coastal development destroys their nesting
habitat.
As a result,
hawksbills have declined from historic numbers by an estimated 80 percent. But
in the Seychelles ,
at least, populations seem to be on the rise.
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