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Journal ArticleDOI

Incubation of eggs of three species of Chelid tortoises, and notes on their embryological development

J Goode, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1968 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 5, pp 749-761
TLDR
There are large individual differences in the period of incubation needed for specific stages to be reached, especially between embryos of the short- necked and long-necked species of these pleurodire tortoises.
Abstract
Incubation periods and nest contents of three species of chelid tortoises in northern Victoria were recorded. Mean incubation period for eggs of Emydura macquari (Cuvier) was 75 days and average number of eggs per nest was 15.7; for Chelodina longicollis (Shaw), 138 days and 10.7 eggs per nest; for Chelodina expansa Gray, normally exceeding 324 days and 15.4 eggs per nest. In abnormal seasons C. expansa hatchlings may emerge from the nest in less than 193 days or more than 522 days after eggs were deposited. Eggs artificially incubated at 30°C consistently develop more quickly than those at lower temperatures under natural conditions. In the field nest temperatures closely approximate the mean daily air temperature. Embryos of C. expansa are tolerant to nest temperatures ranging from 4.9°C minimum to 29.6°C maximum. The other species are subject to variations of about 15 degC with up to 8.5 degC variation being recorded in 1 day. Development of early embryos approximated that recorded for cryptodire tortoises. However, there are large individual differences in the period of incubation needed for specific stages to be reached, especially between embryos of the short-necked and long-necked species of these pleurodire tortoises. It is suggested that differences in the anatomy of their eggs are the main factors in the different incubation periods between short-necked and long-necked species.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The physiological ecology of reptilian eggs and embryos. and the evolution of viviparity within the class reptilia

TL;DR: Eggs of Crocodilia and Chelonia have a pair of egg membranes separating a thick layer of albumen from the calcareous shell, while eggs of oviparous Lepidosauria have only a single shell membrane, upon which relatively small amounts of calcium carbonate are deposited.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adapting to the unpredictable: reproductive biology of vertebrates in the Australian wet–dry tropics

TL;DR: In the wet–dry tropics of northern Australia, temperatures are high and stable year-round but monsoonal rainfall is highly seasonal and variable both annually and spatially, leading to adaptations to dealing with this unpredictable variation in precipitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The evolutionary significance of delayed emergence from the nest by hatchling turtles.

J. Whitfield Gibbons, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1978 - 
TL;DR: Reports of delayed emergence by turtles are consolidated to supplement this information with observations on aquatic turtles from the coastal plain of the southeastern United States, and to offer an evolutionary explanation for variation in emergence time within and among species.
Journal Article

Memoirs of the Queensland museum.

TL;DR: A new genus and species of Hydromedusae is described from the waters off North Queensland, which represents the first record of the Dipleurosomatidae in Australian waters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature effects during gestation in a viviparous lizard

TL;DR: The length of gestation of the viviparous lizard Sceloporus jarrovi is strongly dependent upon the body temperature of the pregnant female as mentioned in this paper, and significantly more abnormal or dead offspring were born of pregnant females maintained at constant temperatures of 26, 36 and 38°C than in the control group that was allowed to behaviourally thermoregulate for 8 hd -1 or in animals maintained at 28 and 34°C.
References