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1 October 2016 Incubation Temperature and Sex Ratio of a Python bivittatus (Burmese Python) Clutch Hatched in Everglades National Park, Florida
Alexander J. Wolf, Theresa M. Walters, Michael R. Rochford, Ray W. Snow, Frank J. Mazzotti
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Abstract

We describe characteristics of a Python bivittatus (Burmese Python) nest from observations made from December 2008 through August 2009 in Everglades National Park, Homestead, FL. The nest hatched on 28 July with a 77% hatching success. The female lost 54% of her body weight while breeding, laying, and incubating eggs, and abandoned the nest 3 days before eggs began hatching. Egg-mass temperature was 26.29–31.41 °C (mean = 28.07 °C), and was more stable than the temperature in direct sun above the nest, which ranged from 20.81 °C to 45.70 °C (mean = 28.45 °C). Egg-mass temperature was likely buffered from extreme heat by adjacent vegetation, where the temperature ranged from 23.19 °C to 30.48 °C (mean = 27.05 °C) and from extreme cold by shivering thermogenesis. Of successful hatchlings, 9 were male and 8 were female.

Alexander J. Wolf, Theresa M. Walters, Michael R. Rochford, Ray W. Snow, and Frank J. Mazzotti "Incubation Temperature and Sex Ratio of a Python bivittatus (Burmese Python) Clutch Hatched in Everglades National Park, Florida," Southeastern Naturalist 15(sp8), 35-39, (1 October 2016). https://doi.org/10.1656/058.015.sp803
Published: 1 October 2016
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