Complementary skeletochronology and stable isotope analyses offer new insight into juvenile loggerhead sea turtle oceanic stage duration and growth dynamics
Autor: | Karen A. Bjorndal, Bradley D. MacDonald, Larisa Avens, Jeffrey A. Seminoff, Garrett E. Lemons, Mariela Pajuelo, Alan B. Bolten, Lisa R. Goshe |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Marine Ecology Progress Series. 491:235-251 |
ISSN: | 1616-1599 0171-8630 |
Popis: | Stage durations are integral to wildlife population models that can inform manage- ment, as they influence age at maturation and stage-specific survival rates. To refine oceanic stage duration estimates for western North Atlantic loggerhead sea turtles Caretta caretta, skele- tochronological analysis was conducted on humeri collected in the Azores islands and along the US Atlantic coast. Complementary skeletal growth increment-specific stable isotope analysis was also performed for a sub-set of the humeri, to identify the skeletal growth mark associated with the shift from oceanic to neritic habitat through stable nitrogen isotope (δ 15 N) values and the presence of turtles in inshore waters. Although the transitional growth mark in this sub-sample corresponded to a range of sizes similar to those described in previous studies, mean size at recruitment (55.3 cm straightline carapace length (SCL)) for these turtles was larger than previously estimated. Similarly, while the range of ages at recruitment—corresponding both with the transitional growth mark and those yielded by fitting smoothing splines to SCL-at-age data—overlapped almost fully with earlier estimates, the mean age estimate (12.4 yr) differed from previous studies. Validated back-calculation of somatic growth rates from skeletal growth marks yielded means and ranges that encompassed those of previous loggerhead growth studies in this geographic area. General- ized additive models and generalized additive mixed models used to assess the potential influence of discrete and continuous covariates on back-calculated growth rates spanning 1984 to 2009 indi- cated significant effects of age, SCL, calendar year, and δ 15 N, but none for sex or location. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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