Surprising Resilience: How Sea Turtles May Thrive Amid Global Warming

Young Loggerhead Sea Turtle in the Caribbean Sea near the Bahamas

WaterFrame/Alamy

Recent research indicates that sea turtles may be more resilient to climate change than previously believed. Concerns have been raised that rising temperatures could lead to the extinction of these reptiles, as a majority of turtle eggs tend to develop into females. However, scientists have discovered a genetic safety net that maintains a more balanced sex ratio even as temperatures increase.

According to Chris Eizaguirre at Queen Mary University of London, “We believe we have uncovered the ability of turtles to adapt to the environment they find themselves in.”

The gender of baby sea turtles is temperature-dependent rather than determined by chromosomes. Laboratory studies show that cooler nest temperatures favor male hatchlings, while warmer conditions promote female hatchlings. This raises concerns that global warming could result in significantly more female turtles.

For instance, genetic research conducted in 2018 revealed that around 99% of young green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) aged 4 to 20 years in a nesting area off Australia were female. This finding contributed to alarming predictions about male shortages which could lead to a population collapse.

However, due to the challenges of identifying a turtle’s gender before it reaches maturity, field data regarding hatchling sex ratios have been limited.

To address this gap, Eizaguirre and colleagues conducted both laboratory and field experiments focused on loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta).

In one phase of the study, they collected 240 eggs from seven loggerhead nests along Florida’s Palm Beach County coast. These eggs were incubated at three different temperatures: 27°C (81°F) suitable for male hatchling production, 30°C (86°F) for an equal sex ratio, and 32°C (90°F) to promote female hatchlings.

After one to three days, blood samples were taken from the hatchlings, which were kept until mature enough for sex determination via keyhole surgery or laparoscopic imaging.

By comparing genetic data from the blood samples, researchers found distinctive activity patterns in hundreds of genes that indicated sex, attributable to an epigenetic process called DNA methylation. In females, 383 genes were hypermethylated, while males had 394 hypermethylated genes, many of which are known to play roles in sexual development.

Utilizing these findings, the team conducted field research on Sal Island, Cape Verde, collecting 29 newly laid loggerhead sea turtle eggs. The eggs were divided, with half buried in a cooler area and the other half in a warmer spot, and monitored for temperature variations.

Analysis of blood samples from 116 hatchlings revealed a higher number of males than predicted, suggesting previous models had overestimated female hatchling production by 50-60%, likely due to previously unrecognized biological adaptations.

“This discovery highlights that molecular mechanisms exist that help turtles adapt to climate change by modulating the sensitivity of sexual differentiation to temperature,” Eizaguirre explains.

“While feminization is a concern and does occur due to climate change, we are suggesting that if populations are robust and genetically diverse, species can adapt to their environmental conditions,” he adds.

These findings are supported by recent evidence from Graham Hayes at Deakin University, which showed that more male sea turtles are hatching than originally expected if temperature were the sole factor in sex determination. Hayes notes that turtles can adapt their crucial temperature-related sex ratios to local conditions.

In addition, turtles employ other strategies to mitigate the impacts of climate change, such as nesting earlier in the season and adjusting their migration patterns to breeding grounds to counteract feminization effects. “While females may not breed annually, males migrate to breeding grounds more frequently, contributing to a more balanced reproductive sex ratio,” Hayes explains.

Despite these behavioral adaptations, Eizaguirre warns that hatchlings still face threats from excessive heat, which can lead to lasting changes in DNA methylation—an indication of molecular adaptation that is promising for these vulnerable reptiles.

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Source: www.newscientist.com

The most challenging game I’ve ever played: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

I Do not play the game. Points are not displayed. I haven’t reread the book either and rarely re-watch movies or TV shows. There are so many new, bigger, better things that come out every day, and there’s too little time to consume them. However, I made an exception with the teenage mutant ninja turtles. Because the original was very special.

I’ve come towards the end of the ZX Spectrum play day. I was in college and was only interested in it if the teenage mutant ninja turtle was in tall glass and was in the Mandelabar for happy hour prices. However, the game went home in the summer to get me crazy and became the most difficult video game I’ve ever completed. And when I started re-releasing the PS4, which will be offered as part of the TMNT Cowabunga collection, it worries me. (PlayStation Plus Essentials March)

I’m worried that my gaming brain has played a lazy modern game. There, you are spoiled to vomit in the place and spitting collision detection, so it can become a priest, which will result in a discoloration of memory in this golden game.

I was right!

Collision detection is at the relentless Meinik Minor/Megaman level, but through trial and error, we have rediscovered what makes the game easier. The level structure is soft so you can kill enemies from platforms or walls above or below. I also remember that I can “hot swap” the turtle. This means using Donatello on long poles. The rhino is a small metal dagger, similar to the cutlery Elon Musk had balanced with Mar Lago’s fingers. It’s even less useful. To kill enemies with Raphael in this game, you need to get close enough to smell the toppings you had on pizza.




Unreadable…Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Kawabunga Collection. Photo: Konami

I played this for 2 hours after death. It was the first time I’d throw a controller at the wall since I stopped FIFA.

The night reminds us of an A-level exam as many of us have finished as it was back then, and at that bloody underwater level, we need to soften the bombs under the dam within time limits. You cannot overcome that level without hitting multiple radioactive weeds. I can’t believe I completed it that day and I’m worried that it was one of the things I imagined in the 90s.

Such a terrifying, clunky gameplay will not serve your purpose in 2025.

Or is that possible?

I endured on the second day. I thought the way to get through the bad dam levels was to crash all the enemies and exchange turtles hot when the energy was low. (And in the sense that it is “remembered,” it means “searched Reddit.”)

Most importantly, we discovered that this re-release has an inverted rewind button! You can go back 30 seconds for every failed pixel jump! I’d like to read the game manual, but I’m a guy in his 50s. I don’t read any more instructions than asking for directions when I get lost.

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I completed the level and was treated with the sweetest sentence ever written in the history of video games. April said: “The dam is safe. Let’s go home.”

Supported by this, I broke the next few levels over the next few days. It’s difficult to have a rewind button, but it recalibrates the overall attitude of the game. You can’t charge it to the level you can do in today’s games. This was a time when we literally had to move forward, wait, and enemies appeared, learn patterns, and move. You need to slow down your full play method. And that’s not a bad thing. In 2025, life will move at 10 billion miles per hour. I wake up three times on the night to check who is trying to break into who.

My heart and mind are resumed and I reaffirm the greatness of this game. The scrolls and boomerang weapons are immeasurable. I put them there in pure fun with Doom’s BFG, Golden Eye’s Golden Gun, and Worm’s Holy Handren bullet.

I even learn to love the indecipherable nature of block-like graphics. The mutant toad looked recognizable, as did the shredder and his foot soldiers. So did the cheeky space monkeys, but they turned out to be in fact a giant flea. Most enemies are like an 8-bit Rorschach test, and their identity is the result of projections from my subconscious. So it could be the wild butterfly I’m trying to kill, but it could also be my feelings of inadequacy in men.

I’m so glad that I didn’t give up on this game. Because we’ve never done anything like children. You had one game a month. You played it. You continued doing that. We are now diletantes of games, jumping from one subscription service to another, but we may not even actually go through the list of games.

I’m only in the middle. But I will become a soldier through all my hard-earned inches. And it becomes completely Kawabunga.

Source: www.theguardian.com

Baby turtles delightedly dance for their food in adorable video

Exciting news! There are new dancing animals in town, and they go by the name of Happy Feet. Recent research has uncovered the adorable jig that baby loggerhead turtles perform when they approach their favorite feeding spot.

A study captured the lively turtle movements, including tilting their bodies vertically, lifting their heads, opening their mouths, moving their front flippers in a paddling motion, and sometimes even spinning in place.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ici6yr6jxo

Researchers noted a distinct difference in the “turtle dance” behavior between feeding and non-feeding areas.

However, the study did not explore how these animals fare on the dance floor. The mystery of how turtles locate their favorite feeding spots during long migrations and lifetimes has intrigued scientists for quite some time.

New research suggests that turtles use Earth’s magnetic fields as a guide to identify the unique magnetic characteristics of their preferred feeding spots and celebrate with a dance when they find them.

In the experiment, researchers recreated two magnetic field signatures found worldwide, corresponding to locations near the Gulf of Mexico and New Hampshire, USA. Turtles were trained to associate each magnetic field with a feeding site.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hotoqkdg3cc

The results showed that turtles exhibited more “turtle dance” behavior in designated feeding areas, indicating their ability to distinguish between the two magnetic fields.

“Sea turtles can sense both the strength and tilt of magnetic fields,” explained the lead researcher. “They not only detect these magnetic properties but also have a remarkable memory for them.”

This memory was evident as the turtles continued to recognize the designated feeding sites months after the initial experiment, even when not exposed to them. This demonstrates the turtles’ ability to navigate using magnetic cues and retain memories of specific locations.

Adult turtles have been observed returning to foraging sites after migrating for breeding, while baby loggerheads travel to coastal feeding grounds using ocean currents. Previous studies have shown their reliance on a “magnetic compass” for navigation, with the current research exploring their “magnetic map” capabilities.

The research team plans to delve deeper into these mechanisms in future studies to uncover how turtles perceive and use magnetic information for navigation.

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Source: www.sciencefocus.com

House cats consume more than 2,000 species, including turtles and insects.

cats are formidable predators

Gary John Norman / Alamy

Domestic cats have been recorded to eat more than 2,000 other species, and the actual number of species they eat is probably much higher. This is the result of a first attempt to create a comprehensive list.

“We know that cats eat a lot, but I don’t think anyone has really looked into the full story,” he says. Christopher Lepczyk At Auburn University in Alabama. “We started thinking, how big is this problem? Are there any animals that cats aren’t eating?”

Based on scientific papers, his team created a database of what cats ate and where they ate. This list includes 981 birds, 463 reptiles, 431 mammals (including humans), 119 insects, 57 amphibians, and 33 species belonging to other groups.

Of these 2,084 species, 347 are considered endangered or already extinct in the wild, including the western quoll, green turtle, and Newell’s shearwater, including the Stevens Island wren. But the study didn’t consider how big a role cat predation played in these cases, Lepczyk said.

These numbers are far from telling the complete story, he says. “We are just the tip of the iceberg.”

For example, in many cases where cats were recorded eating insects or other invertebrates, the species was not identified.

“The range of cats’ diets far exceeds what we’ve seen in many other carnivores and predators,” Lepczyk said. “There are few things cats won’t eat.”

Some of the species included in the database are also scavenged by cats, which is part of the reason why the list includes species too large for cats to kill. But in some cases, such as green sea turtles, cats can catch juveniles, Lepczyk said.

The study did not consider what could be done to reduce the amount of wildlife killed by domestic cats. However, some helpful measures include keeping your cat indoors or in a fenced yard, microchipping, and having your cat spayed or neutered.

It was also recently discovered that cats can spread the brain-altering parasite that causes toxoplasmosis to both wildlife and humans.

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Source: www.newscientist.com