Did Declining Carrying Capacity For The Kemp'S Ridley Sea Turtle Population Within The Gulf Of Mexico Contribute To The Nesting Setback In 2010-2017?

Keywords

carrying capacity; Cheloniidae; Deepwater Horizon oil spill; ecosystem degradation; Gulf of Mexico; Lepidochelys kempii; Mexico; nesting female abundance index; per capita food availability; regression models; Reptilia; shrimp trawling; Tamaulipas; Testudines

Abstract

The Kemp's ridley (Lepidochelys kempii) is the most endangered sea turtle species. During 1966-2017, an annual count of nests (i.e., clutches of eggs laid) has served as an annual index of Kemp's ridley nesting female abundance on the Gulf of Mexico (GoM) index beach in Tamaulipas, Mexico. This index was increasing exponentially at 19% per year in 2009, but it dropped unexpectedly by more than a third in 2010 and through 2017 remained well below levels predicted. We hypothesize that pre-2010 declining carrying capacity for the Kemp's ridley population within the GoM contributed to this nesting setback. We discuss pre-2010 factors that may have caused carrying capacity to decline, including degradation of the GoM ecosystem, the exponentially increasing Kemp's ridley population, and declining per capita availability of neritic (i.e., postpelagic) Kemp's ridley food, including natural prey and scavenged discarded bycatch from shrimp trawling. We encourage evaluations (especially those within a robust modeling framework) of this hypothesis and others put forth to explain the nesting setback to provide information needed to guide restoration of the population's progress toward recovery.

Publication Date

6-1-2018

Publication Title

Chelonian Conservation and Biology

Volume

17

Issue

1

Number of Pages

123-133

Document Type

Review

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.2744/CCB-1283.1

Socpus ID

85048830453 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85048830453

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