Abstract

The Pacific Coast of the Baja California Peninsula (BCP), Mexico, is a hotspot for for- aging loggerhead turtles Caretta caretta originating from nesting beaches in Japan. The BCP re- gion is also known for anthropogenic sea turtle mortality that numbers thousands of turtles annu- ally. To put the conservation implications of this mortality into biological context, we conducted aerial surveys to determine the distribution and abundance of loggerhead turtles in the Gulf of Ul- loa, along the BCP Pacific Coast. Each year from 2005 to 2007, we surveyed ca. 3700 km of transect lines, including areas up to 140 km offshore. During these surveys, we detected loggerhead turtles at the water's surface on 755 occasions (total of 785 loggerheads in groups of up to 7 turtles). We applied standard line-transect methods to estimate sea turtle abundance for survey data collected during good to excellent sighting conditions, which included 447 loggerhead sightings during ~6400 km of survey effort. We derived the proportion of time that loggerheads were at the surface and visible to surveyors based on in situ dive data. The mean annual abundance of 43 226 logger- head turtles (CV = 0.51, 95% CI range = 15 017 to 100 444) represents the first abundance estimate for foraging North Pacific loggerheads based on robust analytical approaches. Our density estimate confirms the importance of the BCP as a major foraging area for loggerhead turtles in the North Pacific. In the context of annual mortality estimates of loggerheads near BCP, these results suggest that up to 11% of the region's loggerhead population may perish each year due to anthro- pogenic and/or natural threats. We calculate that up to 50% of the loggerhead turtles residing in the BCP region in any given year will die within 15 yr if current mortality rates continue. This un- derscores the urgent need to minimize anthropogenic and natural mortality of local loggerheads.

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