Department of Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation Biology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(7):e38472. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038472. Epub 2012 Jul 3.
Current understanding of the factors influencing hawksbill sea turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) hatch success is disparate and based on relatively short-term studies or limited sample sizes. Because global populations of hawksbills are heavily depleted, evaluating the parameters that impact hatch success is important to their conservation and recovery. Here, we use data collected by the Jumby Bay Hawksbill Project (JBHP) to investigate hatch success. The JBHP implements saturation tagging protocols to study a hawksbill rookery in Antigua, West Indies. Habitat data, which reflect the varied nesting beaches, are collected at egg deposition, and nest contents are exhumed and categorized post-emergence. We analyzed hatch success using mixed-model analyses with explanatory and predictive datasets. We incorporated a random effect for turtle identity and evaluated environmental, temporal and individual-based reproductive variables. Hatch success averaged 78.6% (SD: 21.2%) during the study period. Highly supported models included multiple covariates, including distance to vegetation, deposition date, individual intra-seasonal nest number, clutch size, organic content, and sand grain size. Nests located in open sand were predicted to produce 10.4 more viable hatchlings per clutch than nests located >1.5 m into vegetation. For an individual first nesting in early July, the fourth nest of the season yielded 13.2 more viable hatchlings than the initial clutch. Generalized beach section and inter-annual variation were also supported in our explanatory dataset, suggesting that gaps remain in our understanding of hatch success. Our findings illustrate that evaluating hatch success is a complex process, involving multiple environmental and individual variables. Although distance to vegetation and hatch success were inversely related, vegetation is an important component of hawksbill nesting habitat, and a more complete assessment of the impacts of specific vegetation types on hatch success and hatchling sex ratios is needed. Future research should explore the roles of sand structure, nest moisture, and local weather conditions.
目前,人们对影响玳瑁海龟(Eretmochelys imbricata)孵化成功率的因素的理解是不一致的,这些研究主要基于相对短期的研究或有限的样本量。由于全球玳瑁数量严重减少,评估影响孵化成功率的参数对于它们的保护和恢复非常重要。在这里,我们使用 Jumby Bay Hawksbill Project(JBHP)收集的数据来研究孵化成功率。JBHP 实施饱和标记协议来研究安提瓜的一个玳瑁筑巢地,在西印度群岛。栖息地数据反映了不同的筑巢海滩,在卵沉积时收集,在孵化后挖掘和分类巢内内容物。我们使用具有解释性和预测性数据集的混合模型分析来分析孵化成功率。我们为海龟身份引入了一个随机效应,并评估了环境、时间和个体生殖变量。在研究期间,孵化成功率平均为 78.6%(标准差:21.2%)。高度支持的模型包括多个协变量,包括距植被的距离、沉积日期、个体季节性内巢数、窝卵数、有机含量和沙粒大小。与位于植被中>1.5 米的巢穴相比,位于开阔沙滩上的巢穴每窝可孵化出 10.4 只更多的幼龟。对于 7 月初首次筑巢的个体,当季的第四个巢穴比最初的巢穴多孵化出 13.2 只更多的幼龟。在我们的解释性数据集,广义的海滩部分和年际变化也得到了支持,这表明我们在孵化成功率方面仍存在理解上的差距。我们的研究结果表明,评估孵化成功率是一个复杂的过程,涉及多个环境和个体变量。尽管距植被的距离与孵化成功率呈反比,但植被是玳瑁筑巢栖息地的重要组成部分,需要更全面地评估特定植被类型对孵化成功率和幼龟性别比例的影响。未来的研究应该探索沙质结构、巢内湿度和当地天气条件的作用。