2011
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2011.0603
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Shifting the life-history paradigm: discovery of novel habitat use by hawksbill turtles

Abstract: Adult hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) are typically described as open-coast, coral reef and hard substrate dwellers. Here, we report new satellite tracking data on female hawksbills from several countries in the eastern Pacific that revealed previously undocumented behaviour for adults of the species. In contrast to patterns of habitat use exhibited by their Caribbean and Indo-Pacific counterparts, eastern Pacific hawksbills generally occupied inshore estuaries, wherein they had strong associations … Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…Los juveniles se encuentran principalmente en arrecifes de coral tropicales y por lo general se les ve a lo largo del día descansando en cuevas y salientes alrededor de estos arrecifes (Lutz y Musick, 1997). Como especie de marcado carácter migratorio (Meylan y Donnelly, 1999), también se les puede encontrar en una amplia variedad de hábitats, desde el mar abierto hasta lagunas y manglares en estuarios (Lutz y Musick, 1997;Gaos et al, 2012a;Gaos et al, 2012b). Aunque no se sabe mucho sobre las preferencias de hábitat durante sus primeros años de vida, se asume que la tortuga carey, al igual que otras tortugas marinas jóvenes, son completamente pelágicas, con lo que hacen del mar abierto su hogar en la primera etapa de su vida (Houghton et al, 2003).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…Los juveniles se encuentran principalmente en arrecifes de coral tropicales y por lo general se les ve a lo largo del día descansando en cuevas y salientes alrededor de estos arrecifes (Lutz y Musick, 1997). Como especie de marcado carácter migratorio (Meylan y Donnelly, 1999), también se les puede encontrar en una amplia variedad de hábitats, desde el mar abierto hasta lagunas y manglares en estuarios (Lutz y Musick, 1997;Gaos et al, 2012a;Gaos et al, 2012b). Aunque no se sabe mucho sobre las preferencias de hábitat durante sus primeros años de vida, se asume que la tortuga carey, al igual que otras tortugas marinas jóvenes, son completamente pelágicas, con lo que hacen del mar abierto su hogar en la primera etapa de su vida (Houghton et al, 2003).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…Mangrove estuaries are one of the most resource-rich habitats along the eastern Pacific coastline (Dewalt et al, 1996;Gaos et al, 2012b) and an abundance of highquality prey (e.g., invertebrates) in these habitats may provide sufficient energy resources to enable nesting during consecutive years at these study sties. Additionally, adult hawksbills in the eastern Pacific undertake relatively short post-nesting migrations between nesting and foraging grounds (maximum = 283.1 km) or are non-migratory altogether (Gaos et al, 2012a(Gaos et al, , 2012b, a behavior that would further facilitate nesting during consecutive seasons.…”
Section: Nesting Distribution and Abundancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Oviposition is an energy-demanding process and female sea turtles often skip reproductive years if they do not have sufficient fat reserves, instead remaining in foraging areas to continue to feed and accumulate the energy required (see refs in Santos et al, 2010). Our remigration intervals were pooled from three of our study sites located in the Central (n = 2) and South (n = 1) American regions (Table 2), from which a total of 18 post-nesting hawksbills have been tracked via satellite telemetry, the majority (n = 15; 83.3%) to foraging grounds located in mangrove estuaries (Gaos et al, 2012a(Gaos et al, , 2012bGaos & Seminoff, unpubl. data).…”
Section: Nesting Distribution and Abundancementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricata is a circumtropically distributed marine species that occupies coral reef habitats throughout most of its range (Carr et al 1966, Mortimer & Donnelly 2008, except in parts of the eastern Pacific where Gaos et al (2012) recently discovered hawksbills living in mangrove estuaries. Generally considered spongivores (Meylan 1988, Van Dam & Diez 1997, hawksbills also consume other species such as corallimorphs, hydroids, sea urchins and jellyfish (Carr et al 1966, Leon & Bjorndal 2002, Blumenthal et al 2009b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%