Animals (May 2022)

Minor Sea Turtle Nesting Areas May Remain Unnoticed without Specific Monitoring: The Case of the Largest Mediterranean Island (Sicily, Italy)

  • Oleana Olga Prato,
  • Valentina Paduano,
  • Giulia Baldi,
  • Salvatore Bonsignore,
  • Gerlando Callea,
  • Carlo Camera,
  • Girolamo Culmone,
  • Stefania D’angelo,
  • Diego Fiorentino,
  • Gino Galia,
  • Salvatore Coriglione,
  • Laura Genco,
  • Giuseppe Mazzotta,
  • Nicola Napolitano,
  • Francesco Paolo Palazzo,
  • Giuseppe Palilla,
  • Santo Dylan Pelletti,
  • Toni Mingozzi,
  • Luigi Agresti,
  • Paolo Casale

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12091221
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 1221

Abstract

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Identifying coastal tracts suitable for sea turtle reproduction is crucial for sea turtle conservation in a context of fast coastal development and climate change. In contrast to nesting aggregations, diffuse nesting is elusive and assessing nesting levels is challenging. A total of 323 nesting events by the loggerhead sea turtle Caretta caretta have been reported in Sicily, the largest Mediterranean island, in the 1944–2021 period, mostly in the last decade. Specific monitoring efforts are the most likely explanation for such an increase and shows that sea turtle nesting may be underestimated or completely ignored in many areas with scattered nesting. The real nesting level along the 464 km sandy shores of Sicily is still unknown and more research is needed. The observed incubation period was relatively long (57 d) suggesting that a majority of males are produced in Sicily, in contrast to the typical female-biased sex ratio of sea turtles. In a context of climate warming producing sex ratios more skewed towards females, the potential of Sicily as a male-producing area should be further investigated. Other reproductive parameters are provided, such as clutch size and hatching and emergence success. A negative effect of relocation on the latter two was observed.

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