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Chemical aspects of mass spawning in corals. II. (-)-Epi-thunbergol,the sperm attractant in the eggs of the soft coral Lobophytum crassum (Cnidaria: Octocorallia)
Authors:J C Coll  P A Leone  B F Bowden  A R Carroll  G M König  A Heaton  R de Nys  M Maida  P M Aliño  R H Willis  R C Babcock  Z Florian  M N Clayton  R L Miller  P N Alderslade
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Texas A&M University, 77843 College Station, Texas, USA;(2) U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, P.O. Box 1306, 87103 Albuquerque, New Mexiko, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, College of Arts and Sciences, 32nd and Chestnut Streets, 19104 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract:Sea turtles migrate between feeding and nesting areas that are often geographically separated by hundreds or thousands of kilometers. Observations of their aggregations at sea and at nesting beaches have led to the hypothesis that sea turtles migrate in socially structured groups. While this migratory strategy is common to many marine vertebrates, socially facilitated behavior is not well documented in testudines. In 1990 and 1991, we attached satellite transmitters to olive ridleys (Lepidochelys olivacea Eschscholtz) found ovipositing together during a mass nesting at Nancite Beach, Costa Rica, to determine whether they migrate independently or in groups after they leave the nesting beach. Results showed that the turtles were not spatially associated during the internesting period, were capable of re-establishing themselves as a group during a subsequent nesting emergence, and were not spatially associated during their postnesting migrations to oceanic feeding areas. We suggested that what appear to be socially structured groups of L. olivacea are in fact individual turtles simultaneously using the same habitat.
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