Conservation‐relevant reproductive parameters from long‐term tagging of two globally important sea turtle nesting aggregations in Central Africa

Assessing abundance and monitoring ecology and population trends are of critical importance for animal species of conservation concern. For sea turtles, annual nest counts represent the most common method of estimating population size. However, to develop a better understanding of population trends,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aquatic conservation 2023-11, Vol.33 (11), p.1200-1217
Hauptverfasser: Casale, Paolo, Abitsi, Gaspard, Agamboue, Pierre Didier, Augowet, Eric, Bayet, Jean Pierre, Billes, Alexis, Bitsindou, Abdon, Collins, Tim, Doherty, Phil D., Faure, François Edgard, Fretey, Jacques, du Plessis, Philippe, Gibudi, Alain, Godley, Brendan J., Kema Kema, Judicaël Regis, Koumba Mabert, Brice D., Lamou Boussamba, François, Maganga, Pierre Brice, Manfoumbi, Jean Churley, Ondo Ndong, Bienvenue, Metcalfe, Kristian, Minton, Gianna, Mounguengui, Gil Avery, Ngouessono, Solange, Nzegoue, Jacob, Kouerey Oliwina, Carmen Karen, Parnell, Richard J., Ricois, Sandrine, Roumet, Dominique, Sounguet, Guy‐Philippe, Tilley, Dominic, van Leeuwe, Hilde, Verhage, Bas, White, Lee, Witt, Matthew J., Viljoen, Wynand, Formia, Angela
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Assessing abundance and monitoring ecology and population trends are of critical importance for animal species of conservation concern. For sea turtles, annual nest counts represent the most common method of estimating population size. However, to develop a better understanding of population trends, these data need to be complemented by other reproductive parameters, which are lacking for many nesting populations across central Africa. To this end, an intensive capture–mark–recapture programme was conducted spanning 21 years (1997–2018) in the most important nesting sites on the Atlantic coast of central Africa (Gabon and Congo) for leatherback ( Dermochelys coriacea ) and olive ridley ( Lepidochelys olivacea ) sea turtles. A total of 18,105 encounters of 14,109 D. coriacea individuals and 2678 encounters of 2427  L. olivacea individuals were recorded. Biological and technical parameters such as clutch frequency, inter‐nesting interval, remigration interval, annual survival rate, somatic growth, size trends, tag loss and number of annual nesting females were estimated through a variety of methods and models. The study detected a decline in body size and low survival probability (not due to tag loss) in both species but no clear decline in estimated annual number of nesting females. High fidelity to nesting sites (
ISSN:1052-7613
1099-0755
DOI:10.1002/aqc.3995