Diversity (Jun 2025)
Are Painted Turtles (<i>Chrysemys picta</i>) Resilient to the Potential Impact of Climate Change on Vitamin D via Overgrown Floating Vegetation?
Abstract
Floating aquatic vegetation and algal blooms are increasing with global warming, potentially reducing UVB exposure and, consequently, vitamin D (vit-D) synthesis in freshwater turtles. Vit-D mediates calcium metabolism and overall health, yet the effects of floating aquatic vegetation on vit-D levels remain unclear, as is whether turtles actively avoid habitats with abundant floating vegetation. Here, we address these questions by quantifying vit-D3 levels in the blood of adult female painted turtles (Chrysemys picta) exposed to high-vegetation (darker/colder) or clear-water (lighter/warmer) treatments for one month outdoors and one month indoors at a single temperature during late summer and early fall. The observed circulating vit-D3 levels resembled those reported for other freshwater turtles, declined over time in both treatments, and were marginally lower under high vegetation after 60 days compared to clear water. However, this difference disappeared after correcting for lymph contamination and multiple comparisons, suggesting that perhaps adult females are robust to the effect of floating vegetation, but whether they were buffered by vit-D3 stores in lipids is unclear. Additionally, in subsequent years, females were exposed to habitat choice experiments and exhibited a strong preference for high floating vegetation over clear water, both as a group (outdoors) and individually (outdoors, and indoors at 21 °C and 26 °C), consistent with known benefits conferred by floating vegetation (food, predator avoidance). While no ill effects of high vegetation nor behavioral avoidance were detected here, longer experiments at different seasons on both sexes and varying ages are warranted before concluding whether painted turtles are truly resilient in their vit-D levels or if, instead, a tradeoff exists between the known benefits of floating vegetation and potential [yet unidentified] detrimental effects (lower dissolved oxygen or vit-D) when vegetation is overgrown for extended periods.
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