Global Ecology and Conservation (Sep 2021)

Movements and distribution of hawksbill turtles in the Eastern Indian Ocean

  • Sabrina Fossette,
  • Luciana C. Ferreira,
  • Scott D. Whiting,
  • Joanne King,
  • Kellie Pendoley,
  • Takahiro Shimada,
  • Marissa Speirs,
  • Anton D. Tucker,
  • Phillipa Wilson,
  • Michele Thums

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
p. e01713

Abstract

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Western Australia (WA) is one of the largest remaining hotspots for hawksbill turtles. Providing data from this region is a total of 42 satellite transmitter deployments on nesting hawksbill turtles at six rookeries (five located in WA and one in Timor-Leste) between 2000 and 2017. We used this data to quantify inter-nesting, migratory and foraging habitat use and overlap with protected areas. Turtles from WA rookeries (n = 40) remained in WA waters during their inter-nesting, migration and foraging phases, whereas those from Timor-Leste (n = 2) migrated to and foraged in WA. While inter-nesting, turtles remained in relatively small areas with an average 50% occupancy core of 39 ± 28 km2. Apart from one rookery, most of their inter-nesting distribution was contained within existing protected areas. Turtles migrating from WA rookeries remained in shallow continental-shelf waters ( 20 m), revealing new foraging habitats in need of further research and management. Our study provides the first quantitative stock-wide distribution maps for WA adult female hawksbill turtles during the different phases of their life cycle. These distributions can be used to directly refine critical areas for this species, particularly for foraging as currently only around a third of the foraging distribution we calculated overlapped with designated protected areas. It appears that Australia-focussed management strategies are appropriate for adult female hawksbill turtles from WA rookeries as they do not leave Australian waters. However, for Timor-Leste adult females, evidence of international migrations, unknown stock affiliation and limited samples sizes show that further investigation is required to understand how domestic and regional management is structured to ensure their future conservation.

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