Natural beaches confer fitness benefits to nesting marine turtles
Authored by David A Pike
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2008.0359
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Abstract
Coastal ecosystems provide vital linkages between aquatic and
terrestrial habitats and thus support extremely high levels of
biodiversity. However, coastlines also contain the highest densities of
human development anywhere on the planet and are favoured destinations
for tourists, creating a situation where the potential for negative
effects on coastal species is extremely high. I gathered data on marine
turtle reproductive output from the literature to determine whether
coastal development negatively influences offspring production. Female
loggerhead (Caretta caretta) and green turtles (Chelonia mydas) nesting
on natural beaches (as opposed to beaches with permanent development)
produce significantly more hatchling turtles per nest; all else being
equal, females that successfully produce more offspring will have higher
fitness than conspecifics producing fewer offspring. Thus, female marine
turtles nesting on natural beaches probably have higher fitness than
turtles nesting on developed beaches. Consequently, populations nesting
on natural beaches may be able to recover more quickly from the historic
population declines that have plagued marine turtles, and some species
may recover more quickly than others.
Tags
Individual-based model
Tourism
behavior
environment
population
Success
Impacts
Reproduction
Caretta-caretta
Sea-turtles