No Evidence of Long-Term Effects on Physiological Stress or Innate Immune Functioning in Northern Map Turtles Ten Years After a Freshwater Oil Spill

Capture site and eco-immunology parameters for northern map turtles (Graptemys geographica) in the Kalamazoo River, Michigan, USA in 2020. Turtles were sampled either from river stretches that had been oiled in 2010 following an oil pipeline rupture, or from a control stretch upstream of the oil spi...

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1. Verfasser: Jeanine Refsnider
Format: Dataset
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Capture site and eco-immunology parameters for northern map turtles (Graptemys geographica) in the Kalamazoo River, Michigan, USA in 2020. Turtles were sampled either from river stretches that had been oiled in 2010 following an oil pipeline rupture, or from a control stretch upstream of the oil spill origin (SiteType). For turtles sampled from formerly oiled river stretches, we calculated the river-distance in m from each turtle’s capture location (Latitude and Longitude) to the origin of the ruptured oil pipeline (DistFromSpill). Turtles were classified (Age) as either sub-adults (5.9 – 7.0 cm for males, 5.5 – 16.0 cm for females) or adults (>7.0 cm for males, >16.0 cm for females) based on PlastronLength (cm). CarapaceLength, CarapaceWidth, and PlastronWidth were also measured in cm. A subset of turtles were known, based on presence of previously implanted PIT tags, to have been rescued and rehabilitated in the immediate aftermath of the 2010 oil spill; at their time of rescue in 2010 these turtles had been classified (OilExposureIn2010) as “heavily oiled” (>50% of the individual’s surface was oiled), “moderately oiled” (oil on 10-50% of the body surface), “lightly oiled” (
DOI:10.17632/6jnp59k59s.1