Abstract

BackgroundSea turtles are long-distance migrants with considerable behavioural plasticity in terms of migratory patterns, habitat use and foraging sites within and among populations. However, for the most widely migrating turtle, the leatherback turtle Dermochelys coriacea, studies combining data from individuals of different populations are uncommon. Such studies are however critical to better understand intra- and inter-population variability and take it into account in the implementation of conservation strategies of this critically endangered species. Here, we investigated the movements and diving behaviour of 16 Atlantic leatherback turtles from three different nesting sites and one foraging site during their post-breeding migration to assess the potential determinants of intra- and inter-population variability in migratory patterns.Methodology/Principal FindingsUsing satellite-derived behavioural and oceanographic data, we show that turtles used Temporary Residence Areas (TRAs) distributed all around the Atlantic Ocean: 9 in the neritic domain and 13 in the oceanic domain. These TRAs did not share a common oceanographic determinant but on the contrary were associated with mesoscale surface oceanographic features of different types (i.e., altimetric features and/or surface chlorophyll a concentration). Conversely, turtles exhibited relatively similar horizontal and vertical behaviours when in TRAs (i.e., slow swimming velocity/sinuous path/shallow dives) suggesting foraging activity in these productive regions. Migratory paths and TRAs distribution showed interesting similarities with the trajectories of passive satellite-tracked drifters, suggesting that the general dispersion pattern of adults from the nesting sites may reflect the extent of passive dispersion initially experienced by hatchlings.Conclusions/SignificanceIntra- and inter-population behavioural variability may therefore be linked with initial hatchling drift scenarios and be highly influenced by environmental conditions. This high degree of behavioural plasticity in Atlantic leatherback turtles makes species-targeted conservation strategies challenging and stresses the need for a larger dataset (>100 individuals) for providing general recommendations in terms of conservation.

Highlights

  • Many species show considerable behavioural plasticity in terms of foraging and habitat use in response to fluctuations in environmental conditions and prey availability [1,2,3,4,5], or to changes in energetic requirements associated with the different stages of the annual cycle

  • Distinct dispersal patterns were observed according to the tagging location and 22 Temporary Residence Areas (TRAs) were identified (Fig. 1)

  • The last female (SU05-1) dispersed eastward reaching the Guinea Dome area in October 2005. She stayed in this oceanic area until March 2006 before reaching the Mauritania upwelling area (TRA4) where she remained for two months

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Summary

Introduction

Many species show considerable behavioural plasticity in terms of foraging and habitat use in response to fluctuations in environmental conditions and prey availability [1,2,3,4,5], or to changes in energetic requirements associated with the different stages of the annual cycle (e.g., reproduction, migration [6,7,8]). Some fisheries may increase food availability for gannets through waste while other fisheries compete directly with the birds when harvesting their main natural prey, making the implementation of any conservation policies in this area challenging [12,13,14]. This example highlights the difficulty of implementing efficient conservation strategies at a species level without taking into account interpopulation variability in terms of foraging and dispersal behaviour. We investigated the movements and diving behaviour of 16 Atlantic leatherback turtles from three different nesting sites and one foraging site during their postbreeding migration to assess the potential determinants of intra- and inter-population variability in migratory patterns

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