Abstract

When a sea turtle dies, it typically sinks to the bottom, begins decomposing, and floats to the surface once sufficient internal gases have accumulated to produce positive buoyancy. This process is poorly characterized and is essential to understanding where and when sea turtles found on shore may have died. We conducted decomposition studies with detailed time-temperature histories using carcasses of cold-stunned sea turtles (22 Kemp’s ridleys Lepidochelys kempii and 15 green sea turtles Chelonia mydas) at temperatures of 14-32°C and depths of 2.2-9.5 m. We found strong depth/pressure-related effects; carcasses took longer to float when incubated at greater depths than shallower depths at similar temperatures. Furthermore, carcasses incubated at colder temperatures (~15°C) took 8 times longer to float than those at 32°C at the same depth. We applied accumulated degree hours (ADH; hourly sum of ambient temperatures a carcass experienced) to characterize environmental conditions associated with different stages of decomposition and key events, including buoyancy and sinking. A formula for temperature-correction of ADH was calculated to fit a non-linear increase in decomposition at higher temperatures. These data were then used to improve an existing backtracking model by incorporating water temperature, depth (pressure), bathymetry, and postmortem condition. Heat maps of the probable mortality locations from the model agreed well with carcass and effigy drift experiments, demonstrating the overall reliability of the enhanced model. Our method can be used to estimate at-sea locations where sea turtles found washed ashore in the northern Gulf of Mexico likely died and may help inform similar efforts in other regions.

Highlights

  • Sea turtle carcasses found on shore, i.e. strandings, are one of the few indicators of mortality at sea

  • Sea turtle carcasses for determining the time to float (TTF) and subsequent decomposition rates were obtained from the Massachusetts, Mississippi, Texas, and North Carolina Sea Turtle Stranding and Salvage Network (STSSN) (Table S1 in the Supplement at www.int-res.com/articles/suppl/n047p029_supp.pdf)

  • We found a possible difference (p = 0.1, t-test) with green sea turtles showing a quicker TTF than the Kemp’s ridleys

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Summary

Introduction

Sea turtle carcasses found on shore, i.e. strandings, are one of the few indicators of mortality at sea. Endang Species Res 47: 29–47, 2022 ity data from ocean hydrodynamic models can be used to numerically backtrack the path of a stranded sea turtle and hypothesize the likely location of death (Nero et al 2013). Any condition where there is air trapped in the body to the extent that it remains positively buoyant could result in floating at death Such conditions include disease states or injuries involving the lung or gastrointestinal tract, pneumocoelom (air within the coelomic cavity), and severe gas embolism (García-Párraga et al 2014, Parga et al 2020)

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