Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 09 Jun 2016

Habitat-Related Variation in Body Size and Reproductive Output and an Examination of Reproductive Allometry in the Sabine Map Turtle (Graptemys sabinensis) across Three River Drainages

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Page Range: 458 – 468
DOI: 10.1643/CE-15-273
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The Sabine Map Turtle (Graptemys sabinensis) inhabits the Sabine-Neches, Calcasieu, and Mermentau river drainages of southwestern Louisiana and east Texas. Sparse data in the literature mark it as having among the smallest body sizes and smallest clutch sizes among the 14 species of the genus Graptemys. All available data on life history originate from the upper Sabine and upper Calcasieu drainages, which are relatively high-gradient rivers with fast currents and numerous sandbars. Downstream segments of these drainages and the entire Mermentau drainage have almost no gradient, with little perceptible current and no sandbars. We sampled G. sabinensis from the Mermentau River and upper and lower portions of both the Sabine and Calcasieu drainages. We collected data on body size and radiographed gravid females in the lower Calcasieu and Mermentau drainages to examine clutch size and egg width and compared our data to literature records and measurements of museum specimens. Both males (to 104 mm in midline plastron length) and females (to 202 mm) were considerably larger in the Mermentau and lower reaches of the Sabine and Calcasieu drainages than in the upper Sabine and upper Calcasieu drainages (to 92 mm and 176 mm, respectively). Clutch sizes were also significantly larger in the Mermentau and lower Calcasieu (mean 5.3 eggs, range 3–7) compared to previously reported clutch sizes for the upper Sabine and upper Calcasieu drainages (mean 2.3 eggs, range 1–4). Comparison with recent findings for other species of Graptemys indicates that it is typical for populations in faster-current habitats to be smaller in body size, although no previous report has shown the magnitude of differences exhibited by G. sabinensis in the present study. Examination of the allometry of reproductive output complemented previous studies of Graptemys in that both egg width and clutch size were hypoallometrically related to female body size, consistent with the hypothesis of anatomical constraints on egg width. The difference between egg width and pelvic aperture width grew larger as females increased in size, suggesting that anatomical constraints may have applied only to smaller females, leaving egg-size optimization possible in larger females. We could not determine the reason for a significant difference in egg width between the Mermentau and lower Calcasieu after correction for female body size, as pelvic aperture width did not vary between the drainages; however, other potential anatomical constraints on egg width were not measured.

<bold>Fig. 1. </bold>
Fig. 1. 

Map of the Sabine-Neches, Calcasieu, and Mermentau river drainages in eastern Texas and southwestern Louisiana showing sites of sample collections of Graptemys sabinensis made in the present study (filled symbols) and earlier sampling (open symbols; Shively, 1982; Lindeman, 2000, 2008; P. Lindeman, unpubl.). Thin lines separate upper drainages in the Sabine-Neches and Calcasieu drainages, where there are abundant sandbars and moderate flow due to gradients in elevation, from sluggish lower drainages that are near sea level and lack sandbars. Drainages are drawn to the upstream extent of known habitation by G. sabinensis (Lindeman, 2013; Ilgen et al., 2014; Louque, 2014).


<bold>Fig. 2. </bold>
Fig. 2. 

Inter- and intradrainage variation in body size of Graptemys sabinensis. The lower pair of panels groups the data as such: the upper Sabine and upper Calcasieu drainages are high-gradient, sandbar-dominated river systems, while the lower Sabine, lower Calcasieu, and Mermentau drainages are low-gradient, sluggish river systems.


<bold>Fig. 3. </bold>
Fig. 3. 

Clutch size distributions for Graptemys sabinensis. The upper Sabine and upper Calcasieu drainages (data from Ewert et al., 2004) are high-gradient, sandbar-dominated river systems, while the lower Calcasieu and Mermentau drainages (data from present study) are low-gradient, sluggish river systems. Legends marked with the same letter denote drainage section samples that did not differ significantly.


<bold>Fig. 4. </bold>
Fig. 4. 

Plastron length of females caught during May and June of 2011–2013 showing number of plastral growth annuli for each individual (• = a turtle lacking discernible annuli). Underlined symbols represent females that were determined to be gravid via inguinal palpation.


<bold>Fig. 5. </bold>
Fig. 5. 

Relationship of clutch size to female plastron length in Graptemys sabinensis from the lower Calcasieu and Mermentau river drainages, with a regression line based on log-transformation of both variables.


<bold>Fig. 6. </bold>
Fig. 6. 

Relationships of pelvic aperture width (PAW) and mean and maximum egg width (EW) in a clutch to female plastron length in Graptemys sabinensis for radiographs from the (A) Mermentau and (B) lower Calcasieu river drainages.


<bold>Fig. 7. </bold>
Fig. 7. 

Radiograph of a female Graptemys sabinensis from the West Fork of the Calcasieu River (153 mm PL), showing a clutch of five eggs and an alimentary tract containing abundant shells of the dark false mussel, Mytilopsis leucophaeata. The large circle posterior to the turtle's withdrawn head is a U.S. quarter placed on the plastron as a size reference.


Contributor Notes

Associate Editor: M. J. Lannoo

Received: 29 Mar 2015
Accepted: 22 Sept 2015
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