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Assessment of hatchery management for the loggerhead turtle ( Caretta caretta ) nests on Göksu Delta, Turkey
- Source :
- Ocean & Coastal Management. 146:89-98
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2017.
-
Abstract
- Sea turtles suffer from numerous threats such as predation, tidal inundation, and coastal building. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of hatchery technique on Göksu Delta beach, Turkey during the nesting season of 2010. For this purpose, eggs of loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta) nests under the risk of tidal inundation were transferred into two protected hatchery sites that were constructed on Göksu Delta beach, in which there were no risk of predation and inundation, and the other nests were left to remain in situ. Hatching success of hatchery and natural nests were calculated. In addition, temperatures of both hatchery and natural nests (5 and 6 nests, respectively) were recorded, and sex ratios were determined using these nest temperatures and incubation periods. It was determined that hatching success increased with increasing distance from the sea (until 31 m) (r2 = 0.98), increasing incubation period (up to 60 days) (r2 = 0.68), and decreasing clutch size (r2 = 0.93), implying that the production of male hatchling is high in a nest if hatching success of that nest is high (or vice versa). Mean hatching success, incubation period, and nest temperature for hatchery nests were found to be 72.8%, 51.1 days, and 30.2 °C, respectively, while the corresponding values for natural nests were found to be 40.5%, 49.9 days, and 31.1 °C, respectively. It was also detected that hatchery nests produced higher proportion of male hatchlings (25.2%) compared with natural nests (13.5%). Based on all these results, it can be concluded that hatchery management on this beach is not a completely effective conservation technique. Nest relocation and/or hatchery management enable the conservationists to increase hatching success rate, but they cause sex ratio alteration. In this respect, we can only partially support nest relocation and/or hatchery management. They should be considered as a last option due to sex ratio alteration. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
- Subjects :
- clutch size
0106 biological sciences
Avian clutch size
nesting
Turkey
Beaches
hatchery
Conservation
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Aquatic Science
Biology
Oceanography
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Loggerhead sea turtle
Incubation periods
Nest
hatching
Göksu Delta
Mersin [Turkey]
Hatchery management
Cheloniidae
conservation planning
Nesting season
Hatchling
Sex ratios
Caretta caretta
Loggerhead turtles
Hatching
010604 marine biology & hydrobiology
Loggerhead sea turtles
Caretta
turtle
incubation
sex ratio
Goksu Delta
biology.organism_classification
Floods
Hatchery
Fishery
Sex ratio alteration
Testudines
temperature profile
Hatching success
Sea turtles
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 09645691
- Volume :
- 146
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Ocean & Coastal Management
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8fc55d473de6f00c3487a988e5d1edfd