Harris Heather S, Benson Scott R, Gilardi Kirsten V, Poppenga Robert H, Work Thierry M, Dutton Peter H, Mazet Jonna A K
Wildlife Health Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, One Shields Ave., Davis, California 95616, USA.
J Wildl Dis. 2011 Apr;47(2):321-37. doi: 10.7589/0090-3558-47.2.321.
Leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) are critically endangered, primarily threatened by the overharvesting of eggs, fisheries entanglement, and coastal development. The Pacific leatherback population has experienced a catastrophic decline over the past two decades. Leatherbacks foraging off the coast of California are part of a distinct Western Pacific breeding stock that nests on beaches in Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. Although it has been proposed that the rapid decline of Pacific leatherback turtles is due to increased adult mortality, little is known about the health of this population. Health assessments in leatherbacks have examined females on nesting beaches, which provides valuable biological information, but might have limited applicability to the population as a whole. During September 2005 and 2007, we conducted physical examinations on 19 foraging Pacific leatherback turtles and measured normal physiologic parameters, baseline hematologic and plasma biochemistry values, and exposure to heavy metals (cadmium, lead, and mercury), organochlorine contaminants, and domoic acid. We compared hematologic values of foraging Pacific leatherbacks with their nesting counterparts in Papua New Guinea (n=11) and with other nesting populations in the Eastern Pacific in Costa Rica (n=8) and in the Atlantic in St. Croix (n=12). This study provides the most comprehensive assessment to date of the health status of leatherbacks in the Pacific. We found significant differences in blood values between foraging and nesting leatherbacks, which suggests that health assessment studies conducted only on nesting females might not accurately represent the whole population. The establishment of baseline physiologic data and blood values for healthy foraging leatherback turtles, including males, provides valuable data for long-term health monitoring and comparative studies of this endangered population.
棱皮龟(Dermochelys coriacea)极度濒危,主要受到龟卵过度捕捞、渔业纠缠和沿海开发的威胁。在过去二十年中,太平洋棱皮龟种群数量急剧下降。在加利福尼亚海岸觅食的棱皮龟是西太平洋独特繁殖种群的一部分,该种群在印度尼西亚、巴布亚新几内亚和所罗门群岛的海滩上筑巢。尽管有人提出太平洋棱皮龟数量的迅速下降是由于成年龟死亡率增加,但对该种群的健康状况知之甚少。对棱皮龟的健康评估检查了在筑巢海滩上的雌性棱皮龟,这提供了有价值的生物学信息,但可能对整个种群的适用性有限。在2005年9月至2007年期间,我们对19只觅食的太平洋棱皮龟进行了体格检查,并测量了正常生理参数、基线血液学和血浆生化值,以及重金属(镉、铅和汞)、有机氯污染物和软骨藻酸的暴露情况。我们将觅食的太平洋棱皮龟的血液学值与其在巴布亚新几内亚筑巢的同类个体(n = 11)以及在哥斯达黎加东太平洋(n = 8)和圣克罗伊岛大西洋(n = 12)的其他筑巢种群进行了比较。这项研究提供了迄今为止对太平洋棱皮龟健康状况最全面的评估。我们发现觅食的棱皮龟和筑巢的棱皮龟在血液值上存在显著差异,这表明仅对筑巢雌性进行的健康评估研究可能无法准确代表整个种群。为健康的觅食棱皮龟(包括雄性)建立基线生理数据和血液值,为对这个濒危种群的长期健康监测和比较研究提供了有价值的数据。