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Journal ArticleDOI

Incubation temperatures, sex ratios and sex determination in a population of Nile crocodiles (Crocodylus niloticus)

J. M. Hutton
- 01 Jan 1987 - 
- Vol. 211, Iss: 1, pp 143-155
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TLDR
A demographic study of the Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus at Lake Ngezi, Zimbabwe, revealed that females predominated in all size classes and among embryos.
Abstract
A demographic study of the Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus at Lake Ngezi, Zimbabwe, revealed that females predominated in all size classes and among embryos. The sex of C. niloticus was shown to be determined by the temperature of egg incubation in constant temperature laboratory experiments. At 31 °C and below only females were produced. The threshold temperature for maleness was between 31 ° and 34 °C, but appeared to vary between clutches. The duration of the incubation period varied with temperature and was 110 days at 28 °C, falling to 85 days at 34 °C. Incubation temperature affected hatchling length, but not mass. Hatchlings from incubation at 34 °C were shorter on average than those from incubation at 28 °C and 31 °C, but by three months had outgrown them. There was no sex-related difference in length in a random sample of 200 two-year-old C. niloticus on a crocodile farm. Mean temperatures in wild nests were consistently lower than 31 °C and therefore the male threshold as determined in the laboratory. Embryonic development was slow and hatching success poor. The shallowest eggs in a nest had higher mean temperatures and more advanced embryos than the deepest eggs. They also experienced daily temperature fluctuations of up to 10 °C during which the maximum occasionally rose to 35 °C. Constant temperature incubation was not a good model of field conditions, but the correlation between nest temperatures and embryonic sex is consistent with temperature-dependent sex determination in the wild.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental sex determination in reptiles: ecology, evolution, and experimental design

TL;DR: Physiological investigations of TSD have clarified the roles of steroid hormones, various enzymes, and H-Y antigen in sexual differentiation, whereas molecular studies have identified several plausible candidates for sex-determining genes in species with TSD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex Determination in Turtles: Diverse Patterns and Some Possible Adaptive Values

Michael A. Ewert, +1 more
- 07 Feb 1991 - 
TL;DR: New data on the genders of young turtles from eggs incubated at controlled temperatures demonstrate temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) in 17 species surveyed for the first time and corroborate TSD in another 11 species, inviting four possible explanations for various aspects of sex determination in reptiles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature-dependent sex determination in crocodilians

TL;DR: Evidence for temperature-dependent sex determination in crocodilians in 11 species is examined by reviewing reports on five and presenting new data for six, suggesting common, underlying mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of Incubation Temperature on Hatchling Phenotype in Reptiles

TL;DR: A recent theoretical model used to predict hatchling sex of reptiles with temperature‐dependent sex determination predicts that sex ratios will be fairly robust to moderate global warming as long as eggs experience substantial daily cyclic fluctuations in incubation temperatures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental temperatures and phenotypic plasticity in reptiles: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: The highly heterogeneous nature of the effects the authors observe, along with a large amount of unexplained variability, indicates that the shape of reaction norms between phenotype and temperature,Along with ecological and/or experimental factors, are important when considering general patterns
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sex Determination in Reptiles

TL;DR: Temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) is common in turtles and has been reported in two lizards and alligators; however, data on TSD are available for few non-turtle species and an attempt is made to deduce their ancestries.
Journal ArticleDOI

When is sex environmentally determined

TL;DR: It is proposed that labile sex determination (not fixed at conception) is favoured by natural selection when an individual's fitness (as a male or female) is strongly influenced by environmental conditions and where the individual has little control over which environment it will experience.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature of egg incubation determines sex in Alligator mississippiensis

TL;DR: Sex is fully determined at the time of hatching and naturally irreversible thereafter, and depends on the temperature of egg incubation, which constitutes a possible selective evolutionary advantage of temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) in alligators in that females become large and sexually mature as early as possible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature‐dependent sex determination in Alligator mississippiensis

TL;DR: The structure of the reproductive systems of hatchling and 1 -year-old alligators was investigated macroscopically and histologically and revealed that heavy females become sexually mature ahead of either light females or light males, which constitutes a selective biological advantage for the evolution of temperature-dependent sex determination in Alligator mississippiensis.
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