Growth and survival outcomes for immature gopher tortoises in
contrasting habitats: a test of drone-based habitat assessment
Abstract
Juvenile growth rates play an important role in demography, as they
shorten time to maturity and often dictate how long individuals remain
vulnerable to predation. However, developing a mechanistic understanding
of the factors determining growth rates can be difficult for wild
populations. The gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) is an ecosystem
engineer threatened by loss and deficient management of its pineland
habitats in the southeastern United States. To aid management, we
investigated the factors governing growth of immature gopher tortoises
and explored use of drone-based imagery as a habitat assessment tool.
From 2021-2022, we captured, measured, and radio-tagged immature
tortoises in native sandhill and human-modified, ruderal habitat in
south-central Florida. We used quarterly, high-resolution drone imagery
to quantify plant cover types and vegetation indices at each occupied
burrow, and measured frequency of occurrence of forage species by hand.
Annual growth rates of immature tortoises in ruderal, grass-dominated
habitat were higher than those in shrub-dominated sandhill and were the
highest published for this species (x̄ = 34.4 mm carapace length/year).
Models based on drone-derived data were able to explain similar
proportions of variation in growth as those based on ground-based
measures of forage, especially for data acquired during the late dry
season when both types of models were most predictive. Habitat
differences in forage nitrogen content were also more pronounced during
the late dry season. Despite concerns about potential growth-survival
trade-offs, tortoises in ruderal habitat did not exhibit lower apparent
survivorship. These findings indicate that habitat dominated by
nutritious non-native grass can provide a valuable supplement to native
sandhill through the mechanism of increased growth rates due to higher
forage quality, especially in late dry season. Finally, our study
demonstrates that drone technology may facilitate management by
providing less labor-intensive ways to assess habitat quality for this
and other imperiled herbivores.