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Collecting a sample of loggerhead sea turtle hatchlings before a natural emergence does not reduce nest productivity

January 1, 2012

 In numerous studies involving hatchling sea turtles, researchers have collected small numbers of hatchlings from nests a few hours before the turtles would otherwise have emerged naturally. This procedure makes it possible to do experiments in which the behavioral or physiological responses of numerous hatchlings must be tested in a limited period of time, and also allows hatchlings to be released back into the sea in time to migrate offshore before dawn. In principle, however, the procedure might inadvertently reduce nest productivity (the number of hatchlings that successfully leave the nest), if digging into a nest prior to emergence somehow reduces the ability of the remaining turtles to emerge. We compared nest productivity in 67 experimental loggerhead nests, from which we removed 10 hatchlings before a natural emergence, to 95 control nests left undisturbed before a natural emergence. The 2 groups showed no statistical differences in productivity. We conclude that taking a few hatchlings from a loggerhead nest shortly before a natural emergence has no negative impact on hatchling production if sampling is done with care at locations where there are few nest predators, and at sites where an emergence can be predicted because nest deposition dates are known.

Publication Year 2012
Title Collecting a sample of loggerhead sea turtle hatchlings before a natural emergence does not reduce nest productivity
DOI 10.3354/esr00409
Authors Michael Salmon, Raymond R. Carthy, Catherine M. F. Lohmann, Kenneth J. Lohmann, Jeanette Wyneken
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Endangered Species Research
Index ID 70173885
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coop Res Unit Atlanta
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