Title
Rookery contributions, movements and conservation needs of hawksbill turtles at foraging grounds in the eastern Pacific Ocean
Date Issued
11 January 2018
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Gaos A.R.
Lewison R.L.
Jensen M.P.
Liles M.J.
Henriquez A.
Chavarria S.
Pacheco C.M.
Valle M.
Melero D.
Gadea V.
Altamirano E.
Torres P.
Vallejo F.
Miranda C.
LeMarie C.
Lucero J.
Oceguera K.
Chácon D.
Fonseca L.
Abrego M.
Seminoff J.A.
Flores E.E.
Llamas I.
Donadi R.
Peña B.
Muñoz J.P.
Ruales D.A.
Chaves J.A.
Otterstrom S.
Zavala A.
Hart C.E.
Brittain R.
Mangel J.
Yañez I.L.
Dutton P.H.
Eastern Pacific Hawksbill Initiative
Publisher(s)
Inter-Research
Abstract
Understanding the spatial ecology of wide-ranging marine species is fundamental to advancing ecological research and species management. For marine turtles, genetic studies using mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) markers have proven invaluable to characterize movement, particularly between rookeries (i.e. nesting sites) and foraging grounds. Hawksbill turtles Eretmochelys imbricata are a globally threatened species whose conservation status is particularly precarious in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Recent research in the region has identified unique life history characteristics, including highly restricted movements, the use of mangrove estuaries for foraging and nesting, as well as a regional pattern of natal foraging philopatry (NFP). For this study, we used mtDNA sequences and mixed-stock analysis of hawksbills from 8 designated foraging grounds and 5 primary rookeries to evaluate stock composition at each foraging ground, assess how stock contributions are affected by the NFP life history strategy, and search for evidence of unidentified rookeries. Although we found evidence supporting the NFP pattern at most foraging grounds, results indicated important site-specific variability at particular foraging grounds. We also found discrepancies among the haplotype frequencies of several foraging grounds and rookeries, as well as the presence of several orphan haplotypes, suggesting undiscovered hawksbill rookeries likely remain in the eastern Pacific. Our findings contextualize the prevalence and scale of the NFP life history strategy and provide insights that can be directly applied to future ecological research and species management and conservation.
Start page
203
End page
216
Volume
586
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Conservación de la Biodiversidad
Biología marina, Biología de agua dulce, Limnología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85040599746
Source
Marine Ecology Progress Series
ISSN of the container
01718630
Sponsor(s)
University of California UC
National Fish and Wildlife Foundation NFWF
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus