Adaptation of sea turtles to climate warming: Will phenological responses be sufficient to counteract changes in reproductive output?

M Fuentes, AJB Santos, A Abreu‐Grobois… - Global Change …, 2024 - Wiley Online Library
Sea turtles are vulnerable to climate change since their reproductive output is influenced by
incubating temperatures, with warmer temperatures causing lower hatching success and …

[HTML][HTML] Evaluating the long-term trend and management of a globally important loggerhead population nesting on Masirah Island, Sultanate of Oman

A Willson, B Witherington, R Baldwin… - Frontiers in Marine …, 2020 - frontiersin.org
Nest count surveys provide an important means for tracking trends in marine turtle
populations. In 2015 the IUCN Red List global status review changed the loggerhead turtle …

[HTML][HTML] Enhanced, coordinated conservation efforts required to avoid extinction of critically endangered Eastern Pacific leatherback turtles

Scientific Reports, 2020 - nature.com
Failure to improve the conservation status of endangered species is often related to
inadequate allocation of conservation resources to highest priority issues. Eastern Pacific …

From terra incognita to hotspot: the largest South Pacific green turtle nesting population in the forgotten reefs of New Caledonia

J Fretey, TC Read, L Carron, C Fontfreyde, A Fourdrain… - Oryx, 2023 - cambridge.org
The green turtle Chelonia mydas is a large marine turtle present in tropical and subtropical
seas of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans. It is categorized as Endangered on the IUCN …

Quantities of marine debris ingested by sea turtles: global meta-analysis highlights need for standardized data reporting methods and reveals relative risk

JM Lynch - Environmental science & technology, 2018 - ACS Publications
Because of their propensity to ingest debris, sea turtles are excellent bioindicators of the
global marine debris problem. This review covers five decades of research on debris …

Population structure and phylogeography reveal pathways of colonization by a migratory marine reptile (Chelonia mydas) in the central and eastern Pacific

PH Dutton, MP Jensen, A Frey… - Ecology and …, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
Climate, behavior, ecology, and oceanography shape patterns of biodiversity in marine
faunas in the absence of obvious geographic barriers. Marine turtles are an example of …

Identification of key marine areas for conservation based on satellite tracking of post-nesting migrating green turtles (Chelonia mydas)

M Baudouin, B de Thoisy, P Chambault, R Berzins… - Biological …, 2015 - Elsevier
The green turtle (Chelonia mydas) is classified as an endangered species on the IUCN Red
List since 1986. This species is especially threatened in South America due to bycatch by …

[HTML][HTML] Global trends in sea turtle research and conservation: Using symposium abstracts to assess past biases and future opportunities

NJ Robinson, J Aguzzi, S Arias, C Gatto… - Global Ecology and …, 2023 - Elsevier
We quantified research trends in the field of sea turtle science by collating data from 30
years of abstracts presented annually at the International Sea Turtle Symposium–the largest …

[HTML][HTML] Hawksbill Sea Turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) Blood and Eggs Organochlorine Pesticides Concentrations and Embryonic Development in a Nesting Area …

PI Salvarani, LR Vieira, J Rendón-von Osten… - Toxics, 2023 - mdpi.com
Environmental contaminants with chemical origins, such as organochlorine pesticides
(OCPs) have major impacts on the health of marine animals, including sea turtles, due to the …

[HTML][HTML] A mitigation hierarchy approach for managing sea turtle captures in small-scale fisheries

WNS Arlidge, D Squires, J Alfaro-Shigueto… - Frontiers in Marine …, 2020 - frontiersin.org
The mitigation hierarchy has been proposed as an overarching framework for managing
fisheries and reducing marine megafauna bycatch, but requires empirical application to …