The hawksbill rookery at Antigua, W.I.: nest success, hatchling behavior, and hatchling survival during offshore migration

File
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Date Issued
2013
EDTF Date Created
2013
Description
The younger life history stages of marine turtles (eggs, hatchlings) often fail to survive. To compensate, sea turtles nest several times/season and produce large clutches of eggs. The hawksbill produces the largest clutches (150 eggs) and the smallest hatchlings of any marine turtle. My study, done at Jumby Bay in Antigua, West Indies, was designed to determine whether they did so to compensate for loss in the nest, hatchling loss in the water, or both factors. I
found that most of the eggs (79 %) survived to become hatchlings that left the nest and entered the sea. However, 88 % of the hatchlings swimming offshore were taken by predators within minutes after they began their migration. These results suggest that at Jumby Bay, large clutch size is favored in hawksbills because of predation pressures on the hatchlings.
Note

Includes bibliography.

Language
Type
Extent
56 p.
Identifier
FA0004049
Additional Information
Includes bibliography.
Thesis (M.S.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2013.
Date Backup
2013
Date Created Backup
2013
Date Text
2013
Date Created (EDTF)
2013
Date Issued (EDTF)
2013
Extension


FAU

IID
FA0004049
Issuance
single unit
Organizations
Person Preferred Name

Reising, Megan

author

Graduate College
Physical Description

Online Resource
56 p.
Title Plain
The hawksbill rookery at Antigua, W.I.: nest success, hatchling behavior, and hatchling survival during offshore migration
Use and Reproduction
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Origin Information

2013
2013
Florida Atlantic University
single unit
Physical Location
Florida Atlantic University Digital Library
Sub Location
Boca Raton, Fla.
Title
The hawksbill rookery at Antigua, W.I.: nest success, hatchling behavior, and hatchling survival during offshore migration
Other Title Info

The hawksbill rookery at Antigua, W.I.: nest success, hatchling behavior, and hatchling survival during offshore migration