Current Search: Stewart, Kelly Rhoda. (x)
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Title
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The risk of hatchling loss to nearshore predators at a high-density loggerhead nesting beach in southeast Florida.
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Creator
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Stewart, Kelly Rhoda., Florida Atlantic University, Wyneken, Jeanette
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Abstract/Description
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It has been recognized that mortality is high for juvenile stages of long-lived vertebrates such as sea turtles, however few studies have quantified mortality rates. The objective of this study was to assess the relative risk that hatchlings face in their first few minutes in the water, at the commencement of their offshore migration from a natural high-density nesting beach (Juno/Jupiter, FL). I followed 217 hatchlings at night by kayak, as they left the beach and documented the proportion...
Show moreIt has been recognized that mortality is high for juvenile stages of long-lived vertebrates such as sea turtles, however few studies have quantified mortality rates. The objective of this study was to assess the relative risk that hatchlings face in their first few minutes in the water, at the commencement of their offshore migration from a natural high-density nesting beach (Juno/Jupiter, FL). I followed 217 hatchlings at night by kayak, as they left the beach and documented the proportion surviving the initial 15 minutes in the water. Of these, 206 survived for an empirical survival rate of 95%. Tarpon were the most common predator observed. This survival rate is much higher than that previously observed at a hatchery (72%); this may be due to temporal and spatial variation in nest location at the natural beach. Juno and Jupiter beaches are therefore highly productive sea turtle rookeries.
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Date Issued
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2001
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12822
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Subject Headings
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Loggerhead turtle--Florida, Sea turtles--Mortality
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Format
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Document (PDF)