4.5 Article

Diel foraging behavior of gravid leatherback sea turtles in deep waters of the Caribbean Sea

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 213, Issue 23, Pages 3961-3971

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.048611

Keywords

diving; energetics; prey ingestion; stomach temperature telemetry; body temperature; Dermochelys coriacea; jellyfish; siphonophores; capital breeders

Categories

Funding

  1. Large Pelagics Research Center, University of New Hampshire

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It is generally assumed that leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea), like other species of sea turtle, do not feed while offshore from nesting beaches, and rely instead on fat reserves to fuel reproductive activities. Recent studies, however, provide evidence that leatherbacks may forage during the internesting interval while offshore in the Western Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. Bio-logging technology was used to investigate the foraging behavior of female leatherback turtles at St Croix, US Virgin Islands. Leatherback gastrointestinal tract temperatures (T(GT)) were analyzed for sudden fluctuations indicative of ingestions, and laboratory ingestion simulations were used to characterize temperature fluctuations associated with ingestion of prey versus seawater. Dive patterns associated with prey ingestion were characterized and the proportion of prey ingestion during the day (05:00-18:59h) and night (19:00-04:59h) were compared. A combined total of 111 prey ingestions for seven leatherback turtles were documented during the internesting interval. The number of prey ingestions ranged from six to 48 for individual turtles, and the majority (87.4%) of these events occurred during the daytime. Prey ingestions were most frequently associated with V-shaped dives, and the mean (+/- 1 s.d.) maximum dive depth with prey ingestion ranged from 154 +/- 51 to 232 +/- 101 m for individual turtles. Although leatherbacks were found to opportunistically feed during the internesting interval, the low prey ingestion rates indicate that energy reserves acquired prior to the breeding season are critical for successful reproduction by leatherbacks from the St Croix, USVI nesting population.

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