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The Ecological Strategies of Sea Turtles
Authors:HENDRICKSON   JOHN R.
Affiliation:Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona 85721
Abstract:By employing concepts such as "option" and "strategy" from gametheory, this study derives an ecologically-oriented dendrogramof the probable evolutionary history and the present relationshipsof sea turtles. An "armored tank" strategy is seen as differentiatingthe first ancestral testudines from the stem reptiles and providingenduring advantages while simultaneously imposing basic restrictionson all later forms. A "flipper" strategy is postulated as basicto development of the sea turtle line, again imposing limitationswhile conferring selective advantage. Modern sea turtle speciesare grouped into three lineages representing strategies of habitat-typeresource partitioning (a split-habitat, migratory pattern, aneritic residence pattern, and a pelagic residence pattern).Within the split-habitat, migratory group, further resource-partitioningby food-type separates the herbivorous Chelonia mydas populationsfrom omnivorous Eretmochelys imbricata and the (apparently)carnivorous Chelonia depressa. Herbivory is seen as integralto the split-habitat, migratory strategy and C. mydas is consideredthe most "traditional" species, with the migratory habit secondarilylost in the other two. At the same time, the enhanced philopatryselected for by the migration strategy is viewed as responsiblefor the fact that C. mydas seems to have the most active race-formationof the three species. Further habitat-type partitioning in theneritic group, together with food-type partitioning, separatesCaretta caretta from the two Lepidochelys species. L. kempiis represented as a consequence of Panamanian separation fromL. olivacea following the last establishment of the isthmusas a land barrier. The third, pelagic residence, strategy isrepresented by Dermochelys coriacea, with little further differentiationof the line. The paper attempts to show that the evolution ofsea turtles has been ecologically logical, that most conceivableniches for marine turtles are presently filled successfully,and that some predictions may be made with regard to gaps inour existing information.
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