| Literature DB >> 23483880 |
Volker Koch1, Hoyt Peckham, Agnese Mancini, Tomoharu Eguchi.
Abstract
Strandings of marine megafauna can provide valuable information on cause of death at sea. However, as stranding probabilities are usually very low and highly variable in space and time, interpreting the results can be challenging. We evaluated the magnitude and distribution of at-sea mortality of marine turtles along the Pacific coast of Baja California Sur, México during 2010-11, using a combination of counting stranded animals and drifter experiments. A total of 594 carcasses were found during the study period, with loggerhead (62%) and green turtles (31%) being the most common species. 87% of the strandings occurred in the southern Gulf of Ulloa, a known hotspot of loggerhead distribution in the Eastern Pacific. While only 1.8% of the deaths could be definitively attributed to bycatch (net marks, hooks), seasonal variation in stranding frequencies closely corresponded to the main fishing seasons. Estimated stranding probabilities from drifter experiments varied among sites and trials (0.05-0.8), implying that only a fraction of dead sea turtles can be observed at beaches. Total mortality estimates for 15-day periods around the floater trials were highest for PSL, a beach in the southern Gulf of Ulloa, ranging between 11 sea turtles in October 2011 to 107 in August 2010. Loggerhead turtles were the most numerous, followed by green and olive ridley turtles. Our study showed that drifter trials combined with beach monitoring can provide estimates for death at sea to measure the impact of small-scale fisheries that are notoriously difficult to monitor for by-catch. We also provided recommendations to improve the precision of the mortality estimates for future studies and highlight the importance of estimating impacts of small-scale fisheries on marine megafauna.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23483880 PMCID: PMC3577704 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Cumulative sea turtle strandings at the Pacific coast of BCS during 2010 and 2011.
Round markers are sites that were monitored specifically for carcasses; rectangles are nesting beaches of olive ridley turtles that were opportunistically monitored for carcasses. Shoreline length (measured as coastline length along the high tide mark) and site names are shown.
Figure 2Monthly stranding frequencies of sea turtles in % of the total strandings at each site during 2010 and 2011.
Site abbreviations are shown in Figure 1.
Deployed and retrieved drifters at each sampling location/trial, the mean stranding probability of drifters (p), 95% posterior probability intervals (PI) in square brackets, the number of observed stranded carcasses, and expected total deaths (15 days−1) of loggerhead (Cc), green (Cm), and olive ridley (Lo) turtles at four study sites along the Baja California peninsula.
| Site | Latitude | Observation period | Drifter # Deployed/Retrieved | Cell sizes |
| # carcasses observed | Expected total deaths 15 d−1 | [95% PI] |
|
| N: 25.1980° | 9–23 July, 2010 | 1070/89 | c | 0.09 |
| 44 | [19, 87] |
| S: 24.8370° | b | [0.04, 0.17] |
| 25 | [7, 66] | |||
| N: 25.1999° | 29 July –12 | 1187/47 | d | 0.05 |
| 88 | [52, 139] | |
| S: 24.8946° | August, 2010 | b | [0.02, 0.12] |
| 12 | [1, 61] | ||
| N: 25.1897° | 25 July –8 | 261/93 | b | 0.36 |
| 27 |
| |
| S: 24.9645° | August, 2011 | b | [0.26, 0.47] |
| 27 |
| ||
|
| 5 |
| ||||||
| N: 25.1593° | 3–17 October, | 142/23 | c | 0.17 |
| 10 |
| |
| S: 24.9964° | 2011 | b | [0.10, 0.26] | |||||
|
| N: 26.2617° | 21 July –4 | 462/77 | d | 0.16 |
| 14 | [3, 60] |
| S: 26.2150° | August, 2010 | b | [0.02, 0.36] |
| 6 |
| ||
| N: 26.2463° | 6–21 August, | 296/29 | d | 0.10 |
| 15 |
| |
| S: 26.2309° | 2010 | b | [0.05, 0.19] | |||||
|
| N: 26.8069° | 12–26 July, | 374/52 | c | 0.13 |
| 5 |
|
| S: 26.7077° | 2010 | b | [0.07, 0.23] | |||||
| N: 25.1980° | 14–28 August, | 454/250 | b | 0.53 |
| 3 |
| |
| S: 24.8370° | 2010 | b | [0.22, 0.82] | |||||
|
| N: 28.0865° | 22 July –5 | 506/394 | b | 0.79 |
| 1 |
|
| S: 27.9205° | August, 2010 | b | [0.67, 0.87] |
| 1 |
|
North and south latitudes correspond to the northern and southernmost latitudes at which drifters were recovered. Estimates of p and their 95% PI for 15-day periods are from the dataset in which drifter deployments were grouped into deployment (upper row) and retrieval (lower row) boxes (b = 0.02°×0.02°, c = 0.03°×0.03°, d = 0.04°×0.04°). These estimates are from the binomial-Poisson model but other models provided similar results. The point estimate is the mode of the hyper-distribution of p’s for all boxes. See text for details.
Figure 3Estimated stranding probabilities for four drifter trials at the main fishing area in Playa San Lázaro (PSL) during 2010 and 2011.
Estimates and their 95% posterior intervals are listed in Table 1. All deployment quadrats are 0.04×0.04 degrees. Circles in the quadrats are coefficient of variations (CV); a circle almost filling the quadrat corresponds to a CV of 1.0). The colored scale shows the stranding probability (p) indicating how likely oranges are to strand when deployed at different locations at sea.
Figure 4Estimated stranding probabilities for orange trials at the main fishing area in Guerrero Negro (GNO),
Punta Abreojos (PAO) and San Juanico (SJU) during 2010. Estimates and their 95% posterior intervals are listed in Table 1. All deployment quadrats are 0.04×0.04 degrees. Circles in the quadrats are coefficient of variations (CV); a circle with half the diameter of the quadrat corresponds to a CV of 0.5). The colored scale shows the stranding probability (p) indicating how likely oranges are to strand when deployed at different locations at sea.