Lost at sea: Genetic, oceanographic and meteorological evidence for storm-forced dispersal


Autoria(s): Monzón Argüello, Catalina; Dell’ Amico, F.; Morinière, P.; Marco, Adolfo; López-Jurado, Luis Felipe; Hays, Graeme; Scott, Rebecca; Marsh, Robert; Lee, Patricia
Data(s)

20/06/2016

20/06/2016

2012

Resumo

<p>[EN] For many species, there is broad-scale dispersal of juvenile stages and/or long-distance migration of individuals and hence the processes that drive these various wide-ranging move- ments have important life-history consequences. Sea turtles are one of these paradigmatic long-distance travellers, with hatchlings thought to be dispersed by ocean currents and adults often shuttling between distant breeding and foraging grounds. Here, we use multi- disciplinary oceanographic, atmospheric and genetic mixed stock analyses to show that juvenile turtles are encountered ‘downstream’ at sites predicted by currents. However, in some cases, unusual occurrences of juveniles are more readily explained by storm events and we show that juvenile turtles may be displaced thousands of kilometres from their expected dispersal based on prevailing ocean currents.</p>

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10553/17515

696026

<p>10.1098/rsif.2011.0788 </p>

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

Acceso libre

Fonte

<p>Journal of the Royal Society Interface. London : The Royal Society, 2012. Vol. 9, nº 73, p. 1725-1732. ISSN: 1742-5689</p>

Palavras-Chave #24 Ciencias de la vida #2401 Biología animal (zoología) #240116 Herpetología #240119 Zoología marina
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article