Confirmation of significant sea turtle nesting activity on a remote island chain in the Gulf of Mexico

Author:

Lamont Margaret M.1ORCID,Ingram Dianne2,Baker Todd3,Weigel Matt4,Shamblin Brian M.5

Affiliation:

1. Wetland and Aquatic Research Center U.S. Geological Survey Gainesville Florida USA

2. Deepwater Horizon Gulf Restoration Office U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Fairhope Alabama USA

3. Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

4. Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

5. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractGlobally, six of the seven sea turtle species are threatened or endangered and as such, monitoring reproductive activity for these species is necessary for effective population recovery. Remote beaches provide a challenge to conducting these surveys, which often results in data gaps that can hamper management planning. Throughout the summer of 2022, aerial surveys were conducted over the Chandeleur Islands in the Gulf of Mexico. Turtle crawls were photographed for subsequent review by 10 expert observers. Whenever possible, ground surveys were conducted, and samples of unhatched eggs or dead hatchlings were collected. A summary of historic reports of sea turtle nesting activity at this site was also compiled. On 11 days between May 4, 2022, and July 30, 2022, photographs of 55 potential sea turtle crawls were taken. Observers identified 54 of those as being made by a sea turtle. There was high‐to‐moderate certainty that 16 of those crawls were nests, that 14 were made by loggerheads, and that two were made by Kemp's ridleys. Observers were least certain of species identification when surveys were conducted during rainy weather. Genetic analyses based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA were conducted on samples from five nests and those analyses confirmed that three nests were laid by Kemp's ridleys and two were laid by loggerheads. Historic records from the Chandeleur Islands substantiate claims that the Chandeleurs have supported sea turtle nesting activity for decades; however, the consistency of this activity remains unknown. Our aerial surveys, particularly when coupled with imaging, were a useful tool for documenting nesting activity on these remote islands. Future monitoring programs at this site could benefit from a standardized aerial survey program with a seaplane so trends in nesting activity could be determined particularly as the beach undergoes restoration.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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