In the central Mediterranean Sea, gut contents and feces of 95 turtles captured by bottom trawlers and pelagic longliners fishing in neritic and oceanic areas, respectively, were examined. Benthic prey were more abundant than pelagic, a probable bias due to the higher digestibility of the latter. Animal and plant taxa belonging to 12 Phyla and 20 Classes were observed, with 63 new records of prey species, and Malacostraca, Gastropoda, and Echinoidea were the most commonly occurring animal classes. Results showed a highly opportunistic foraging behavior by the turtles on both live and dead material in the epipelagic zone as well as on all types of seafloor. Benthic taxa were found in turtles as small as 26 cm curved carapace length (CCL), indicating an early use of benthic resources, and also among turtles over a wide size range caught by pelagic longliners. The lack of evidence of a strict oceanic/ pelagic stage and of a clear habitat shift in the observed size range (25 to 80.3 cm CCL), when considered together with other recent findings, challenges the current ontogenetic model of life history for the species. A relaxed model is proposed, with an early short obligate epipelagic stage due to limited diving capacity, followed by the main opportunistic amphi-habitat stage, with a tendency to prefer benthic prey as turtles grow and their benthic foraging efficiency improves. Under this model, temporary or permanent association or fidelity to specific oceanic or neritic zones would vary among individuals or populations according to food availability and oceanographic features in the foraging or migratory areas. KEY WORDS: Sea turtle · Caretta caretta · Diet · Life history · Mediterranean Resale or republication not permitted without written consent of the publisherMar Ecol Prog Ser 372: [265][266][267][268][269][270][271][272][273][274][275][276] 2008 Mediterranean basin (Margaritoulis et al. 2003). In particular, the area between Sicily (Italy) and Africa is considered among the most important areas for loggerheads and this is where pelagic longliners and bottom trawlers capture high numbers of turtles (Casale et al. 2007a).Diet data from different neritic areas of the basin show markedly different compositions of benthic taxa, an indication of opportunistic feeding (Laurent & Lescure 1994, Godley et al. 1997, Tomas et al. 2001. However, the ecology of loggerhead turtles in the basin is still poorly known. Laurent et al. (1998) hypothesized a transitional stage between the strictly oceanic and neritic stages, in which loggerhead turtles would feed mainly on pelagic prey but also on benthic prey, but this has not yet been adequately investigated through diet analyses. This is not a simple task, since loggerhead turtles in the neritic stage are known to feed throughthe whole water column (Bolten 2003), so that finding pelagic and benthic prey in the same sample (e.g. Tomas et al. 2001) is not proof of a transitional stage.Small loggerhead turtles (minimum size: 29.5 and 22 cm respectively; Casale et al....
SUMMARY: Skeletochronology was applied to humerus bones to assess the age and growth rates of loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) in the Mediterranean Sea. Fifty-five dead turtles with curved carapace lengths (CCL) ranging from 24 to 86.5 cm were collected from the central Mediterranean. Sections of humeri were histologically processed to analyze annual growth marks. Two approaches were used to estimate the somatic growth in the form of a von Bertalanffy growth function. The first approach was based on calculating the total number of growth marks, which corresponds to the age of turtles at death. The second approach estimates the carapace length at old growth marks in order to provide the growth rate of each turtle. The observed individual growth rates ranged from 1.4 to 6.2 cm yr -1 , and showed both elevated inter-and intra-individual variability possibly related to the environmental variability experienced by turtles during their lifetime. Both approaches gave similar results and suggest that Mediterranean loggerhead turtles take 14.9 to 28.5 years to reach a CCL of 66.5 to 84.7 cm. This size corresponds to the average size of nesting females found in the most important Mediterranean nesting sites and can be considered the approximate size at maturity.Keywords: loggerhead sea turtle, growth rate, age at size, skeletochronology, Mediterranean. RESUMEN: Determinación de la edad y el crecimiento por esclerocronología en la tortuga boba marina Caretta Caretta del mar Mediterráneo. -La esclerocronología se aplicaba a los huesos de los húmeros para determinar la edad y las tasas de crecimiento de la tortuga boba Caretta caretta del Mediterráneo. Cincuenta y cinco tortugas bobas muertas de 24 a 86.5 cm de longitud de la curvatura del caparazón (CCL) fueron recogidas del Mediterráneo central. Secciones de los húmeros fueron procesados histológicamente para analizar las marcas anuales de crecimiento. Se aplicaron dos aproximaciones para determinar el crecimiento somático utilizando la función de crecimiento de von Bertalanffy. La primera aproximación se basaba en el número total de marcas de crecimiento, correspondiendo a la edad de las tortugas en el momento de la muerte. La segunda aproximación era una estimación de la longitud del caparazón en las marcas de crecimiento más antiguas, con la intención de saber la tasa de crecimiento de cada tortuga. Las tasas de crecimiento individual observadas, oscilaban entre 1.4 y 6.2 cm año -1 , mostrando una elevada diversidad individual intra e interanual, posiblemente ligada a la variabilidad ambiental experimentada por las tortugas bobas durante su vida. Ambas aproximaciones dieron resultados similares y sugieren que la tortuga mediterránea tarda 14.5-28.5 años en alcanzar un tamaño de 66.5-84.7 cm de CCL. Este tamaño corresponde al tamaño medio de las tortugas bobas hembras nidificantes, encontradas en la mayoría de lugares nidificantes del Mediterráneo y puede ser considerado el tamaño aproximado de la madurez.Palabras clave: tortuga boba marina, tasa de crecimiento, ...
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