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4 May 2017 Assessing Head Morphology Dimorphism in the Midland Painted Turtle ( Chrysemys picta marginata) Using a Photographic Questionnaire
Patrick D. Moldowan, Ronald J. Brooks, Jacqueline D. Litzgus
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Abstract

The ability to identify the sex of animals accurately is important in population studies. Emydid turtles (Testudines: Emydidae) demonstrate a number of sexually dimorphic characters, including head (cranial) size and structure. Field observations from a long-term study of midland painted turtles (Chrysemys picta marginata) in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada, suggested distinct differences in external head morphology between the sexes. We evaluated these putative sexual differences in C. picta head morphology by conducting a visual questionnaire involving human observers of varying levels of experience (novice, beginner, intermediate, and advanced). Observers were capable of distinguishing the sexes based solely on head morphology with a high degree of accuracy (between 79% and 86% success) across experience levels. Observers identified head shape as a defining character distinguishing the sexes. We suggest that visual questionnaires are a quantifiable method of assessing dimorphic characters that can be used in addition to traditional morphometrics or geometric morphometrics to demonstrate a visual, rather than simply statistical, difference among characters and sexes. Despite the breadth of research conducted on C. picta, our study is among the first to describe, assess, and discuss the functional significance of head dimorphism in this model species.

© 2017 Chelonian Research Foundation
Patrick D. Moldowan, Ronald J. Brooks, and Jacqueline D. Litzgus "Assessing Head Morphology Dimorphism in the Midland Painted Turtle ( Chrysemys picta marginata) Using a Photographic Questionnaire," Chelonian Conservation and Biology 16(1), 76-82, (4 May 2017). https://doi.org/10.2744/CCB-1235.1
Received: 26 September 2016; Published: 4 May 2017
KEYWORDS
head morphology
mate recognition
sexual coercion
sexual dimorphism
tomiodont
trophic dimorphism
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