Thirty-year recovery trend in the once depleted Hawaiian green sea turtle stock
Data(s) |
01/01/2004
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Resumo |
The green sea turtle is one of the long-lived species that comprise the charismatic marine megafauna. The green turtle has a long history of human exploitation with some stocks extinct. Here we report on a 30-year study of the nesting abundance of the green turtle stock endemic to the Hawaiian Archipelago. We show that there has been a substantial long-term increase in abundance of this once seriously depleted stock following cessation of harvesting since the 1970s. This population increase has occurred in a far shorter period of time than previously thought possible. There was also a distinct 3-4 year periodicity in annual nesting abundance that might be a function of regional environmental stochasticity that synchronises breeding behaviour throughout the Archipelago. This is one of the few reliable long-term population abundance time series for a large long-lived marine species, which are needed for gaining insights into the recovery process of long-lived marine species and long-term ecological processes. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Elsevier |
Palavras-Chave | #Biodiversity Conservation #Ecology #Environmental Sciences #Green Sea Turtle #Abundance #Population Recovery #French Frigate Shoals #Hawaii #Great-barrier-reef #Population-dynamics #Bayesian-inference #Chelonia-mydas #Marine Turtles #Growth #Resident #Models #C1 #340202 Environment and Resource Economics #729999 Economic issues not elsewhere classified #0502 Environmental Science and Management |
Tipo |
Journal Article |