Current Herpetology
Online ISSN : 1881-1019
Print ISSN : 1345-5834
ISSN-L : 1345-5834
Volume 29, Issue 1
Displaying 1-5 of 5 articles from this issue
Original articles
  • Yuki OKADA, Takashi YABE, Sen-Ichi ODA
    2010 Volume 29 Issue 1 Pages 1-10
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: July 01, 2010
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS
    We investigated the effect of incubation temperature on hatchling sex in the Japanese pond turtle, Mauremys japonica. Eggs obtained from females collected in the Tokai District of Japan invariably produced males when incubated at constant temperatures from 22.0 to 28.0 C, whereas they produced only females under a higher temperature of 30.0 C. Both males and females hatched from eggs incubated at 28.5, 29.0, and 29.5 C. These results indicate that M. japonica has a mechanism of temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) with higher temperatures favoring females and lower temperatures males as in several other species of the family Geoemydidae, as well as of a few other testudine families so far studied. The pivotal temperature and the transitional range of temperature (TRT) in M. japonica obtained by the inverse estimation from logistic regression were 28.8 C and from 27.8–29.8 C, respectively. Possible effect of TSD on the sex ratio observed in some wild populations of this turtle is discussed.
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  • Oren PEARLSON, Leon BLAUSTEIN, Sagi SNIR, Doron GOLDBERG, Gad DEGANI
    2010 Volume 29 Issue 1 Pages 11-22
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: July 01, 2010
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS
    Genetic variation was examined for the endangered banded newts Triturus vittatus vittatus from a number of breeding sites in northern and central Israel near the southern limit of the species' distribution. Altitudes of the sites ranged from 15–740 m asl. Variations in nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene (413-bp-long) and the control region (D-loop) (569-bp-long) were analyzed, of which the former varied at 13 nucleotide sites whereas the latter at 15 sites. Specimens from Berekhya pond, which is located at the lowest altitude, most distant from the other sites, and with the least annual precipitation, were found to be most divergent due to accumulation of anagenetic sequence changes. Sequence analysis showed that the newts from Israel are genetically collectively different from conspecific populations of Syria (Damascus) and Turkey (European part). DNA variation might have possibly been enhanced by differences in ecological conditions that are seemingly most prominent in habitats near the southern limit of the species' distribution.
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  • Tamotsu KUSANO, Kazuko MARUYAMA, Shigenori KANEKO
    2010 Volume 29 Issue 1 Pages 23-31
    Published: 2010
    Released on J-STAGE: July 01, 2010
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS
    The body size and age structure of a breeding population of the Japanese common toad, Bufo japonicus formosus, was studied at Yamakita-machi in Kanagawa Prefecture for three breeding seasons from 1992 to 1994. Yearly variation in snout-vent length (SVL) was not significant, but the difference in SVL between the sexes was highly significant; the mean SVL of males and females was 125.8 and 134.2 mm, respectively. The breeding adults were aged successfully by skeletochronology using phalanges. The breeding adults were 1–8 yr old. The mean and median ages were 4.5 and 4 yr in males, and 5.2 and 5 yr in females, respectively. The males were estimated to begin to breed when one to four yr old, with a mean of 2.4 yr, while the females were estimated to breed when two to four yr old, with a mean of 2.7 yr. Age at first reproduction was significantly younger for males than females. We discuss the sexual size dimorphism of B. j. formosus in relation to the difference in age structure of the breeding population between the sexes clarified by skeletochronology.
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