Date: December 2, 2016
Source: Cornell University
Endangered
leatherback sea turtles are known for their open-ocean migratory nature
and nomadic foraging habits -- traveling thousands of miles. But a
Cornell naturalist and his colleagues have discovered an area along the
Mozambique coast that the turtles have made their permanent home,
according to a study published in Nature's Scientific Reports, Nov. 25.
Understanding
this new behavior could assist scientists in helping boost the turtles'
population and lift them from environmental peril.
"They
seem to be staying there year-round. We've found these turtles -- a
supposed nomadic migrant -- congregating in coastal waters," said Steve
Morreale, senior research associate in the Department of Natural
Resources. "We've identified an area where leatherback turtles are
clustered together. Having a long-term, resident population of densely
congregated leatherback turtles -- in coastal waters -- that's really
remarkable. It clarifies the ecology of this species, and as a result,
we've broadened our scientific view.”
Leatherbacks,
the world's largest reptiles, do not have hard shells like other
turtles. Instead, they have a softer, leather-like shell. The turtles
can weigh up to 1,500 pounds and are eating machines, as one can nosh
daily on hundreds of pounds of its favorite meal -- jellyfish.
Leatherback sea turtles and jellyfish are found throughout the world's
oceans, but the authors of this study think that these leatherbacks are
likely enjoying a bountiful jellyfish supply in the Mozambique Channel.
Morreale
and his colleagues tracked electronically tagged turtles using
satellite telemetry. As expected, some leatherbacks journeyed up to
6,000 miles into the Indian and Atlantic oceans. But, nearly half were
tracked into the Mozambique Channel, which runs between Mozambique and
Madagascar, off the southern African coast. They further confirmed the
turtles' homebody behavior by taking skin samples and examining the
animals' stable isotope signatures, which provide a long-term chemical
analysis of where the animal feeds, at which level of the food web they
eat and whether they feed in the open ocean or along the coastal waters.
A leatherback sea turtle hatchling heads out to sea.
Scientists
had seen this coastal feeding behavior before, but believed that
leatherbacks sought only seasonal refuge along continental shores and
coastal waters.
The
vast oceanic distances that migrating leatherback turtles travel
complicate conservation efforts, explained Morreale, but grasping this
new behavior "makes it a little easier to protect, regulate and to
enforce protection -- especially if it is in one country like Mozambique
-- than if they were spread throughout the world's oceans."
Story Source:
Materials provided by Cornell University. Original written by Blaine Friedlander. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
/story_source
Journal Reference:
Nathan J. Robinson, Stephen J. Morreale, Ronel Nel, Frank V. Paladino.
Coastal leatherback turtles reveal conservation hotspot. Scientific
Reports, 2016; 6: 37851 DOI: 10.1038/srep37851
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