4.0 Article

Home Range and Movement Patterns of Subadult Hawksbill Sea Turtles in Southeast Florida

Journal

JOURNAL OF HERPETOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 58-67

Publisher

SOC STUDY AMPHIBIANS REPTILES
DOI: 10.1670/15-133

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Funding

  1. Florida Atlantic University
  2. Florida Sea Turtle License Plate Grants Program
  3. National Save the Sea Turtle Foundation

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Subadult Hawksbill Turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) reside on the coral reefs of Palm Beach County, Florida, but their movements and patterns of habitat use are poorly understood. In this study, six subadult Hawksbills were tracked with global positioning system (GPS)-linked satellite telemetry for a span of 102-429 days Total home ranges and within-range areas of core'' use were measured with minimum convex polygons (MCPs) and kernel density estimates (KDEs). Home-range estimates ranged 1.1-19.0 km(2) (X = 10.1 km(2)) using MCP and 0.01-1.2 km(2) (X = 0.49 km(2)) using the 95% KDE. Each turtle remained at or near the 15-25 m hard-bottom reef habitats of the area and exhibited strong site fidelity to centrally located core use areas (50% and 25% KDE >, 0.03 km(2)); this was especially true at night, suggesting the repeated use of familiar refuges (shipwrecks/caves) for nocturnal shelter. Likely driven by predator avoidance, competition for a limited number of preferred refuges, or roosts,'' may restrict the extent of each turtle's home range and influence the abundance and distribution of the Hawksbill Turtles that occupy this site.

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