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1 June 2012 The Effects of Disturbance Events on Abundance and Sex Ratios of a Terrestrial Turtle, Terrapene bauri
C. Kenneth Dodd Jr., Natalie L. Hyslop, Madan K. Oli
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Disturbances can affect the structure of ecological communities, and their impacts may have consequences for individual species' population dynamics and long-term persistence. Even without catastrophic mortality, survivorship could be reduced following a disturbance, thus leading to population decline. We used a 16-year mark–recapture dataset to determine the effects of catastrophic storms and the cutting of nonindigenous vegetation on the survivorship and abundance of a population of long-lived terrestrial turtles (Terrapene bauri). Our results indicate that these habitat disturbances had little long-term effect on abundance. Indeed, the population continued to grow despite severe changes to its habitat, although recapture probabilities decreased through time. Tertiary (adult) sex ratios became more highly skewed temporarily but eventually approached their predisturbance levels. In long-lived box turtles, short-term disturbances may alter growth rates and dispersal tendencies, but they appear to have little long-term effect on abundance as long as initial mortality is not severe and food resources remain available.

Chelonian Research Foundation
C. Kenneth Dodd Jr., Natalie L. Hyslop, and Madan K. Oli "The Effects of Disturbance Events on Abundance and Sex Ratios of a Terrestrial Turtle, Terrapene bauri," Chelonian Conservation and Biology 11(1), 44-49, (1 June 2012). https://doi.org/10.2744/CCB-0927.1
Received: 20 April 2011; Accepted: 1 December 2011; Published: 1 June 2012
KEYWORDS
abundance
disturbance
Emydidae
Florida
Florida box turtle
longevity
Reptilia
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