4.7 Article

Cayman Islands Sea Turtle Nesting Population Increases Over 22 Years of Monitoring

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FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
卷 8, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.663856

关键词

artificial beachside lighting; Caribbean; Caretta caretta; Chelonia mydas; Eretmochelys imbricata; illegal take; threats; turtle re-introduction

资金

  1. Cayman Islands Department of Environment (DoE)
  2. Foreign and Commonwealth Office
  3. Turtles in the Overseas Territories (TCOT project)
  4. Turtles in the UK Overseas Territories Project (TUKOT)
  5. Cayman Islands Governor's Fund
  6. Darwin Initiative

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The study reports on sea turtle nest monitoring in the Cayman Islands over a 22-year period, showing significant increases in green and loggerhead turtle nest numbers in recent years, with hawksbill nest numbers remaining low. The captive breeding operation in Grand Cayman contributed to the increase in green turtle population, while loggerhead turtles began to increase after a traditional turtle fishery became inactive. The study highlights the continued threats faced by sea turtles, including illegal harvesting, artificial lighting on nesting beaches, and inundation of nests by seawater.
Given differing trajectories of sea turtle populations worldwide, there is a need to assess and report long-term population trends and determine which conservation strategies are effective. In this study, we report on sea turtle nest monitoring in the Cayman Islands over a 22-year period. We found that green (Chelonia mydas) and loggerhead (Caretta caretta) nest numbers increased significantly across the three islands since monitoring began in 1998, but that hawksbill nest numbers remained low with a maximum of 13 nests recorded in a season. Comparing the first 5 years of nest numbers to the most recent 5 years, the greatest percentage increase in green turtle nests was in Grand Cayman from 82 to 1,005 nests (1,126%), whereas the greatest percentage increase for loggerhead turtle nests was in Little Cayman from 10 to 290 nests (3,800%). A captive breeding operation contributed to the increase in the Grand Cayman green turtle population, however, loggerhead turtles were never captive-bred, and these populations began to increase after a legal traditional turtle fishery became inactive in 2008. Although both species have shown significant signs of recovery, populations remain at a fragment of their historical level and are vulnerable to threats. Illegal harvesting occurs to this day, with multiple females taken from nesting beaches each year. For nests and hatchlings, threats include artificial lighting on nesting beaches, causing hatchlings to misorient away from the sea, and inundation of nests by seawater reducing hatch success. The impacts of lighting were found to increase over the monitoring period. Spatial data on nest distribution was used to identify critical nesting habitat for green and loggerhead turtles and is used by the Cayman Islands Department of Environment to facilitate remediation of threats related to beachside development and for targeted future management efforts.

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