“…In contrast to the lack of information from the Pacific, information about nesting and reproductive ecology in the Caribbean has been obtained in coastal habitats (Ogden, 1978;Mazzotti, 1983;Platt and Thorbjarnarson, 2000b), atolls (Charruau et al, 2010;Platt and Thorbjarnarson, 2000b), some islands (Varona, 1980;Medem, 1981;Thorbjarnarson, 1988Thorbjarnarson, , 1989, and at mainland sites (Medem, 1981;Espinal and Escobedo-Galván, 2010; see Table 4). Comparing our results with these studies, the mean clutch size on Coiba (25.2 ± 9.5 eggs) was not significantly different (one-sample t-test, P = 0.18) from those reported from mainland Panama (46 eggs, Breder, 1946), Mexico, Banco Chinchorro (16.2 ± 4.6 eggs, Charruau et al, 2010), Belize (22.3 ± 6.0 eggs, Platt and Thorbjarnarson, 2000b), Haiti (22.5 ± 2.7 eggs, Thorbjarnarson, 1989), Florida, USA (45.2 ± 17.2 eggs, Ogden, 1978; 38.0 ± 0.4 eggs, Kushlan and Mazzotti, 1989), or in two Colombian populations (mainland 40-60 eggs, Fuerte Island 18-20 eggs; Medem, 1981; Table 4). However, we observed that the mean clutch size of insular populations on Fuerte Island .…”