The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.

Globally, tropical and subtropical regions have experienced an increased frequency and intensity in extreme weather events, ranging from severe drought to protracted rain depressions and cyclones, these coincided with an increased number of marine turtles subsequently reported stranded. This study i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jaylene Flint, Mark Flint, Colin J Limpus, Paul C Mills
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5542510?pdf=render
id doaj-c60694dc1b384542bdb11129b8d966af
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c60694dc1b384542bdb11129b8d966af2020-11-25T01:45:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01128e018254810.1371/journal.pone.0182548The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.Jaylene FlintMark FlintColin J LimpusPaul C MillsGlobally, tropical and subtropical regions have experienced an increased frequency and intensity in extreme weather events, ranging from severe drought to protracted rain depressions and cyclones, these coincided with an increased number of marine turtles subsequently reported stranded. This study investigated the relationship between environmental variables and marine turtle stranding. The environmental variables examined in this study, in descending order of importance, were freshwater discharge, monthly mean maximum and minimum air temperatures, monthly average daily diurnal air temperature difference and rainfall for the latitudinal hotspots (-27°, -25°, -23°, -19°) along the Queensland coast as well as for major embayments within these blocks. This study found that marine turtle strandings can be linked to these environmental variables at different lag times (3-12 months), and that cumulative (months added together for maximum lag) and non-cumulative (single month only) effects cause different responses. Different latitudes also showed different responses of marine turtle strandings, both in response direction and timing.Cumulative effects of freshwater discharge in all latitudes resulted in increased strandings 10-12 months later. For latitudes -27°, -25° and -23° non-cumulative effects for discharge resulted in increased strandings 7-12 months later. Latitude -19° had different results for the non-cumulative bay with strandings reported earlier (3-6 months). Monthly mean maximum and minimum air temperatures, monthly average daily diurnal air temperature difference and rainfall had varying results for each examined latitude. This study will allow first responders and resource managers to be better equipped to deal with increased marine turtle stranding rates following extreme weather events.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5542510?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jaylene Flint
Mark Flint
Colin J Limpus
Paul C Mills
spellingShingle Jaylene Flint
Mark Flint
Colin J Limpus
Paul C Mills
The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jaylene Flint
Mark Flint
Colin J Limpus
Paul C Mills
author_sort Jaylene Flint
title The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.
title_short The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.
title_full The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.
title_fullStr The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.
title_full_unstemmed The impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.
title_sort impact of environmental factors on marine turtle stranding rates.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Globally, tropical and subtropical regions have experienced an increased frequency and intensity in extreme weather events, ranging from severe drought to protracted rain depressions and cyclones, these coincided with an increased number of marine turtles subsequently reported stranded. This study investigated the relationship between environmental variables and marine turtle stranding. The environmental variables examined in this study, in descending order of importance, were freshwater discharge, monthly mean maximum and minimum air temperatures, monthly average daily diurnal air temperature difference and rainfall for the latitudinal hotspots (-27°, -25°, -23°, -19°) along the Queensland coast as well as for major embayments within these blocks. This study found that marine turtle strandings can be linked to these environmental variables at different lag times (3-12 months), and that cumulative (months added together for maximum lag) and non-cumulative (single month only) effects cause different responses. Different latitudes also showed different responses of marine turtle strandings, both in response direction and timing.Cumulative effects of freshwater discharge in all latitudes resulted in increased strandings 10-12 months later. For latitudes -27°, -25° and -23° non-cumulative effects for discharge resulted in increased strandings 7-12 months later. Latitude -19° had different results for the non-cumulative bay with strandings reported earlier (3-6 months). Monthly mean maximum and minimum air temperatures, monthly average daily diurnal air temperature difference and rainfall had varying results for each examined latitude. This study will allow first responders and resource managers to be better equipped to deal with increased marine turtle stranding rates following extreme weather events.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5542510?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT jayleneflint theimpactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
AT markflint theimpactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
AT colinjlimpus theimpactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
AT paulcmills theimpactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
AT jayleneflint impactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
AT markflint impactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
AT colinjlimpus impactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
AT paulcmills impactofenvironmentalfactorsonmarineturtlestrandingrates
_version_ 1725021626770128896