Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Dec 2004

Geometric Morphometric Sex Estimation for Hatchling Turtles: A Powerful Alternative for Detecting Subtle Sexual Shape Dimorphism

,
,
, and
Page Range: 735 – 742
DOI: 10.1643/CH-03-248R1
Save
Download PDF

Abstract

Identifying sex of hatchling turtles is difficult because juveniles are not obviously externally dimorphic, and current techniques to identify sex are often logistically unfeasible for field studies. We demonstrate a widely applicable and inexpensive alternative to detect subtle but significant sexual dimorphism in hatchlings, using landmark-based geometric morphometric methods. With this approach, carapace landmarks were digitized from photographs of each hatchling, and shape variables were generated after variation in size, location and orientation were eliminated. These variables were then analyzed for sexual dimorphism, and used in discriminant function analysis to estimate sex of each hatchling. Using this approach on two species (Chrysemys picta and Podocnemis expansa), we found this method had high accuracy in assigning sex when compared with true sex (98% and 90%, respectively), and cross-validation revealed a correct classification rate of 85%. These correct classification rates were considerably higher than those found on the same species using linear distance measurements as data. We also explored two alternative statistical approaches for assessing sex (K-means clustering and multiple logistic regression) and found that these alternative approaches were accurate only 61% and 78% of the time, respectively, in C. picta and 69% and 77% of the time in P. expansa. These findings are similar to classification rates found for turtle species using approaches based on linear distance measurements. We also found that the observed sexual dimorphism differed between the two species. In P. expansa, males displayed relatively more expansion of the central region of the carapace relative to females, whereas in C. picta this pattern was reversed. We conclude that discriminant analysis of morphology quantified using geometric morphometrics provides researchers with a powerful tool to discriminate between male and female hatchling turtles.

Copyright: The American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
 Fig. 1. 
 Fig. 1. 

Podocnemis expansa hatchling illustrating the location of the 30 landmarks used in this study. For statistical analyses, only landmarks on the right-half of the carapace were used


 Fig. 2. 
 Fig. 2. 

Thin-plate spline deformation grids representing the mean shape of (A) male Podocnemis expansa (B) female P. expansa (C) male Chrysemys picta and (D) female C. picta, as found along the discriminant function axis between sexes (grids are displayed at 3× magnification to emphasize group differences). Orientation is as in Figure 1 with the head of the animals to the right. Solid gray ovals highlight regions of the carapace with significant differences between the sexes, whereas dashed black ovals denote regions were significant differences between species were more pronounced


Contributor Notes

(NV, DCA) Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011; (RMB) Department of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois 61790; and (ACG) Gilbert High School, Gilbert, Iowa 50105. E-mail: (Nv) nvalenzu@iastate.edu Send reprint requests to NV.

Accepted: 17 May 2004
  • Download PDF