Effect of diet on growth in captive Podocnemis unifilis: assessing optimal diets for turtles in head-starting programs

Authors

  • Mason B. Meers University of Tampa https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1329-8777
  • Katie L. Robinson University of Tampa
  • Dustin Smith North Carolina Zoological Park
  • Aurore Scordino University of Tampa
  • Laura Fisher University of Tampa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58782/flmnh.kvwd1981

Keywords:

Podocnemis unifilis, ontogeny, growth, head-starting, conservation, diet, river turtle

Abstract

Because turtles have come under increasing pressures from habitat loss and over-exploitation as food sources and traditional medicine, efforts have focused on options for conservation, including head-starting programs. Success of head-starting programs depends on establishing economical means of rearing hatchlings over relatively short time frames to sizes resistant to predation. We examined effects of three different diets on growth of a clutch of captive Yellow-spotted Amazon River Turtles (Podocnemis unifilis) over a two-year period in a Florida zoo. Rates of growth differed among the three treatment groups; relationships between morphological variables were not affected by diet. Results indicate that turtles fed on a commercial gel diet may exceed growth rates of animals fed on a more natural, vegetarian diet by more than 15% as measured by straight-line carapace length, or by more than 50% in body mass. Use of a vegetarian diet reduced costs to less than 10% of the cost of a commercial gel diet. Choice of diets for turtles in head-starting programs is a variable that should be weighed against other conservation objectives such as captive duration and intended sizes attained.

Journal cover with Florida Museum Logo and the text Florida Museum of Natural History Bulletin University of Florida Gainesville

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Published

2016-12-07

How to Cite

Meers, M., Robinson, K., Smith, D., Scordino, A., & Fisher, L. (2016). Effect of diet on growth in captive Podocnemis unifilis: assessing optimal diets for turtles in head-starting programs. Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History, 54(4), 58–68. https://doi.org/10.58782/flmnh.kvwd1981