Posts Tagged ‘Nesting Ground’

Mating Season

Friday, April 27th, 2012


In the pond in front of my house, during the mating season of the pond cooters, turtle heads are regularly seen in threes or fours. Off and on, for as long as two or three days at a time I have watched groups of these heads with a spotting scope, and while I could see little of what the bearers of the heads were actually doing, it did not seem to involve any very violent strife. The three heads simply stayed together in a restricted patch of water for a day or more at a time, and there were occasional outbreaks of splashing and finally, the back of one of the turtles would come out of the water, indicating that mating was taking place.

A similar thing occurs among the green turtles at their nesting ground on the coast of Costa Rica. Here, too, the observations made have been only in snatches, and whatever subtleties of courtship behavior are carried out have not been seen. But during the early part of the nesting season the turtles mate out in front of the beach a few hundred yards beyond the surf line. For the first week or so of the mating time there are large numbers of courtship groups involving two males and one female. Among sea turtles, mating is a strenuous process. Attempts of the male to mount the back of the female involve a great deal of thrashing and splashing of water. Once the male attains the position on the upper shell of the female, however, he remains firmly anchored by two huge claws on his front flippers which grip the fore edges of her shell, and by a strong horn at the tip of his tail which curls up under the back edge of her shell. The only time male turtles are seen on shore at the nesting ground is when a copulating pair is caught by a breaker and thrown onto the beach.

The courtship of the alligator is noisy and exciting. The bull bellows and exudes musk from glands on the throat and at the sides of the cloaca. When the female approaches, the two of them race about in wild circles, making a big wake that rocks the reeds and sends the fishes flying. The frogs stop singing and the waterfowl scream.

Closely related to courtship is rivalry and combative behavior among males. This sort of strife is not generally disorderly and injurious, but actually may serve a variety of useful purposes. It keeps the race physically on its toes, as it were, weeding out the weaker individuals as breeders. It brings about a distribution of territory, and thus lends order to both the reproductive process and the daily life of the individual. It establishes hierarchies of dominance and submission, and these again contribute harmony by forestalling more harmful untrammeled fighting. And just a courtship does,  the fighting may help instigate glandular cycles involved in the mating process.

 

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Sunday, March 8th, 2009


Among different reptiles , fertilization is scheduled differently and at different times, with the respect to the very time , timing and calendar events of nesting and nesting behavior and behaviors.  In many ,  if not most species , this tends to occur ,  as might well be expected ,  just before the time periods and time periods when the actual eggs are laid.  However in some species , the sperm must amazingly live on in the reproductive tract of the females, and continue thus to fertilize eggs months or even years and years after copulation activities have taken place – sometimes long ago in the past time periods.

The longest known time periods , of such deferment and deferments of fertilization activities  are four years , for the diamondback terrapin of the southeastern areas of the United States – the USA.  and five years in the case and cases of the tropical American cat-eye snake.   The green turtle, which evidently and apparently mates only in the sea , off the nesting area and nesting beach areas,  often does so only after the female has gone ashore and laid her egg and egg clutch.  Since a given female makes her migration to the nesting ground only once in three or rarely in two years, it thus seems more than probable and indeed likely , that  sperm itself must be stored , in a in-vivo condition , between  that length of time period and periods between the nesting journeys.

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