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Biological and environmental influences on the trophic ecology of leatherback turtles in the northwest Atlantic Ocean
Authors:Bryan P Wallace  Joel Schumacher  Jeffrey A Seminoff  Michael C James
Institution:1. Stratus Consulting, 1881 Ninth St., Suite 201, Boulder, CO, 80302, USA
2. Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Beaufort, NC, USA
3. Southwest Fisheries Science Center, NMFS-NOAA, La Jolla, CA, USA
4. Population Ecology Division, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Dartmouth, NS, B2Y 4A2, Canada
Abstract:Understanding the causes and consequences of variability in trophic status is important for interpreting population dynamics and for identifying important habitats for protected species like marine turtles. In the northwest Atlantic Ocean, many leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) from distinct breeding stocks throughout the Wider Caribbean region migrate to Canadian waters seasonally to feed, but their trophic status during the migratory and breeding cycle and its implications have not yet been described. In this study, we used stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of bulk skin to characterize the trophic status of leatherbacks in Atlantic Canadian waters by identifying trophic patterns among turtles and the factors influencing those patterns. δ15N values of adult males and females were significantly higher than those of turtles of unknown gender (i.e., presumed to be subadults), and δ15N increased significantly with body size. We found no significant differences among average stable isotope values of turtles according to breeding stock origin. Significant inter-annual variation in δ15N among cohorts probably reflects broad-scale oceanographic variability that drives fluctuations in stable isotope values of nutrient sources transferred through several trophic positions to leatherbacks, variation in baseline isotope values among different overwintering habitats used by leatherbacks, or a combination of both. Our results demonstrate that understanding effects of demographic and physiological factors, as well as oceanographic conditions, on trophic status is key to explaining observed patterns in population dynamics and for identifying important habitats for widely distributed, long-lived species like leatherbacks.
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