Evaluating trends in abundance of immature green turtles, Chelonia mydas, in the Greater Caribbean


Autoria(s): Bjorndal, Karen A.; Bolten, Alan B.; Chaloupka, Milani Y.
Contribuinte(s)

L. F. Pitelka

Data(s)

01/02/2005

Resumo

Many long-lived marine species exhibit life history traits. that make them more vulnerable to overexploitation. Accurate population trend analysis is essential for development and assessment of management plans for these species. However, because many of these species disperse over large geographic areas, have life stages inaccessible to human surveyors, and/or undergo complex developmental migrations, data on trends in abundance are often available for only one stage of the population, usually breeding adults. The green turtle (Chelonia mydas) is one of these long-lived species for which population trends are based almost exclusively on either numbers of females that emerge to nest or numbers of nests deposited each year on geographically restricted beaches. In this study, we generated estimates of annual abundance for juvenile green turtles at two foraging grounds in the Bahamas based on long-term capture-mark-recapture (CMR) studies at Union Creek (24 years) and Conception Creek (13 years), using a two-stage approach. First, we estimated recapture probabilities from CMR data using the Cormack-Jolly-Seber models in the software program MARK; second, we estimated annual abundance of green turtles. at both study sites using the recapture probabilities in a Horvitz-Thompson type estimation procedure. Green turtle abundance did not change significantly in Conception Creek, but, in Union Creek, green turtle abundance had successive phases of significant increase, significant decrease, and stability. These changes in abundance resulted from changes in immigration, not survival or emigration. The trends in abundance on the foraging grounds did not conform to the significantly increasing trend for the major nesting population at Tortuguero, Costa Rica. This disparity highlights the challenges of assessing population-wide trends of green turtles and other long-lived species. The best approach for monitoring population trends may be a combination of (1) extensive surveys to provide data for large-scale trends in relative population abundance, and (2) intensive surveys, using CMR techniques, to estimate absolute abundance and evaluate the demographic processes' driving the trends.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76325/UQ76325_OA.pdf

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76325

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Ecological Society of America

Palavras-Chave #Abundance #Bahamas #Capture-mark-recapture #Chelonia Mydas #Costa Rica #Demography #Greater Caribbean #Green Turtle #Long-lived Species #Population Trends #Sea Turtles #Tortuguero #Ecology #Capture-recapture Data #Statistical-inference #Nesting Numbers #Model Selection #Marked Animals #Marine Turtles #Costa-rica #Survival #Population #Probabilities
Tipo

Journal Article