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Catch rates and demographics of loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) captured from the Charleston, South Carolina, shipping channel during the period of mandatory use of turtle excluder devices (TEDs).

Authors :
Arendt, Michael D.
Schwenter, Jeffrey A.
Segars, Albert L.
Byrd, Julia I.
Maier, Philip P.
Whitaker, J. David
Owens, David W.
Blanvillain, Gaëlle
Quattro, Joseph M.
Roberts, Mark A.
Source :
Fishery Bulletin; Jan2012, Vol. 110 Issue 1, p98-109, 12p
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Trawling was conducted in the Charleston, South Carolina, shipping channel between May and August during 2004-07 to evaluate loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) catch rates and demographic distributions. Two hundred and twenty individual loggerheads were captured in 432 trawling events during eight sampling periods lasting 2-10 days each. Catch was analyzed by using a generalized linear model. Data were fitted to a negative binomial distribution with the log of standardized sampling effort (i.e., an hour of sampling with a net head rope length standardized to 30.5 m) for each event treated as an offset term. Among 21 variables, factors, and interactions, five terms were significant in the final model, which accounted for 45% of model deviance. Highly significant differences in catch were noted among sampling periods and sampling locations within the channel, with greatest catch furthest seaward consistent with historical observations. Loggerhead sea turtle catch rates in 2004-07 were greater than in 1991-92 when mandatory use of turtle excluder devices was beginning to be phased in. Concurrent with increased catch rates, loggerheads captured in 2004-07 were larger than in 1991-92. Eighty-five percent of loggerheads captured were ≤75.0 cm straight-line carapace length (nuchal notch to tip of carapace) and there was a 3.9:1 female-to-male bias, consistent with limited data for this location two decades earlier. Only juvenile logger- heads ≤75.0 cm possessed haplotypes other than CC-A01 or CC-A02 that dominate in the region. Six rare and one un-described haplotype were pre-dominantly found in June 2004. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00900656
Volume :
110
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Fishery Bulletin
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
72956886