Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.

The rehabilitation of wildlife can contribute directly to the conservation of threatened species by helping to maintain wild populations. This study focused on determining the post-rehabilitation survival and spatial ecology of sea turtles and on comparing the movements of individuals with flipper a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: David P Robinson, Kevin Hyland, Gerhard Beukes, Abdulkareem Vettan, Aneeshkumar Mabadikate, Rima W Jabado, Christoph A Rohner, Simon J Pierce, Warren Baverstock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246241
id doaj-ca04ae879ff74a798ffe2df0683ea6d7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ca04ae879ff74a798ffe2df0683ea6d72021-07-30T04:30:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01162e024624110.1371/journal.pone.0246241Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.David P RobinsonKevin HylandGerhard BeukesAbdulkareem VettanAneeshkumar MabadikateRima W JabadoChristoph A RohnerSimon J PierceWarren BaverstockThe rehabilitation of wildlife can contribute directly to the conservation of threatened species by helping to maintain wild populations. This study focused on determining the post-rehabilitation survival and spatial ecology of sea turtles and on comparing the movements of individuals with flipper amputations (amputees) to non-amputee animals. Our aims were to assess whether rehabilitated sea turtles survive after release, to compare and contrast the movement characteristics of the different species of sea turtles we tracked, and to examine whether amputees and non-amputees within species behaved similarly post-release. Twenty-six rehabilitated sea turtles from four species, including hawksbill Eretmochelys imbricata (n = 12), loggerhead Caretta caretta (n = 11), green Chelonia mydas (n = 2), and olive ridley Lepidochelys olivacea (n = 1) sea turtles from the United Arab Emirates were fitted with satellite tags before release. Rehabilitation times ranged from 89 to 817 days (mean 353 ± 237 days). Post-release movements and survival were monitored for 8 to 387 days (mean 155 ± 95 days) through satellite tracking. Tag data suggested that three tracked sea turtles died within four days of release, one after 27 days, and one after 192 days from what are thought to be anthropogenic factors unrelated to their pre-rehabilitation ailments. We then compared habitat use and movement characteristics among the different sea turtle species. Although half of all turtles crossed one or more international boundaries, dispersal varied among species. Loggerhead turtles had a high dispersal, with 80% crossing an international boundary, while hawksbill turtles displayed higher post-release residency, with 66% remaining within UAE territorial waters. Amputee turtles moved similarly to non-amputee animals of the same species. Loggerhead turtles travelled faster (mean ± sd = 15.3 ± 8 km/day) than hawksbill turtles (9 ± 7 km/day). Both amputee and non-amputee sea turtles within a species moved similarly. Our tracking results highlight that rehabilitated sea turtles, including amputees, can successfully survive in the wild following release for up to our ~one-year monitoring time therefore supporting the suitability for release of sea turtles that have recovered from major injuries such as amputations. However, more broadly, the high mortality from anthropogenic factors in the Arabian Gulf region is clearly a serious issue and conservation challenge.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246241
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David P Robinson
Kevin Hyland
Gerhard Beukes
Abdulkareem Vettan
Aneeshkumar Mabadikate
Rima W Jabado
Christoph A Rohner
Simon J Pierce
Warren Baverstock
spellingShingle David P Robinson
Kevin Hyland
Gerhard Beukes
Abdulkareem Vettan
Aneeshkumar Mabadikate
Rima W Jabado
Christoph A Rohner
Simon J Pierce
Warren Baverstock
Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.
PLoS ONE
author_facet David P Robinson
Kevin Hyland
Gerhard Beukes
Abdulkareem Vettan
Aneeshkumar Mabadikate
Rima W Jabado
Christoph A Rohner
Simon J Pierce
Warren Baverstock
author_sort David P Robinson
title Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.
title_short Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.
title_full Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.
title_fullStr Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.
title_full_unstemmed Satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.
title_sort satellite tracking of rehabilitated sea turtles suggests a high rate of short-term survival following release.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The rehabilitation of wildlife can contribute directly to the conservation of threatened species by helping to maintain wild populations. This study focused on determining the post-rehabilitation survival and spatial ecology of sea turtles and on comparing the movements of individuals with flipper amputations (amputees) to non-amputee animals. Our aims were to assess whether rehabilitated sea turtles survive after release, to compare and contrast the movement characteristics of the different species of sea turtles we tracked, and to examine whether amputees and non-amputees within species behaved similarly post-release. Twenty-six rehabilitated sea turtles from four species, including hawksbill Eretmochelys imbricata (n = 12), loggerhead Caretta caretta (n = 11), green Chelonia mydas (n = 2), and olive ridley Lepidochelys olivacea (n = 1) sea turtles from the United Arab Emirates were fitted with satellite tags before release. Rehabilitation times ranged from 89 to 817 days (mean 353 ± 237 days). Post-release movements and survival were monitored for 8 to 387 days (mean 155 ± 95 days) through satellite tracking. Tag data suggested that three tracked sea turtles died within four days of release, one after 27 days, and one after 192 days from what are thought to be anthropogenic factors unrelated to their pre-rehabilitation ailments. We then compared habitat use and movement characteristics among the different sea turtle species. Although half of all turtles crossed one or more international boundaries, dispersal varied among species. Loggerhead turtles had a high dispersal, with 80% crossing an international boundary, while hawksbill turtles displayed higher post-release residency, with 66% remaining within UAE territorial waters. Amputee turtles moved similarly to non-amputee animals of the same species. Loggerhead turtles travelled faster (mean ± sd = 15.3 ± 8 km/day) than hawksbill turtles (9 ± 7 km/day). Both amputee and non-amputee sea turtles within a species moved similarly. Our tracking results highlight that rehabilitated sea turtles, including amputees, can successfully survive in the wild following release for up to our ~one-year monitoring time therefore supporting the suitability for release of sea turtles that have recovered from major injuries such as amputations. However, more broadly, the high mortality from anthropogenic factors in the Arabian Gulf region is clearly a serious issue and conservation challenge.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246241
work_keys_str_mv AT davidprobinson satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT kevinhyland satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT gerhardbeukes satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT abdulkareemvettan satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT aneeshkumarmabadikate satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT rimawjabado satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT christopharohner satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT simonjpierce satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
AT warrenbaverstock satellitetrackingofrehabilitatedseaturtlessuggestsahighrateofshorttermsurvivalfollowingrelease
_version_ 1721247907791765504