Chinese-Australian research finds new gender clues about turtle embryos
CGTN
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Turtle embryos can determine their own sex while developing in the egg by moving around to change their temperature, Chinese-Australian research said on August 2.

By monitoring clutches of turtle eggs, scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Australia's Macquarie University showed that not only does temperature determine the sex of turtle hatchlings, the embryos actually shift within the eggs to change their own outcome.

A sea turtle hatchling crawling on the sand. /VCG Photo

A sea turtle hatchling crawling on the sand. /VCG Photo

In most turtles species, eggs exposed to high temperatures are more likely to be female and eggs exposed to cooler temperatures are more likely to be male.

Sea turtle hatchlings in a sand pit. /VCG Photo

Sea turtle hatchlings in a sand pit. /VCG Photo

The dramatic effect of temperature on turtle embryos has raised concerns about the effects of global warming, with reports last year showing that around 99 percent of the turtles born in the warmer regions of Australia's Great Barrier Reef were female.

(Cover image via VCG)

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Source(s): Xinhua News Agency