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| Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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| Format: | Artículo científico |
| Language: | en |
| Published: |
Ecology
2025
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41054921/ |
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| _version_ | 1868266144181256192 |
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| author | Maurer, Andrew S Horrocks, Julia A Bellini, Claudio Eckert, Karen L Fireman, Alexandra L Fuentes, Mariana M P B Krueger, Barry Levasseur, Kathryn E Marcovaldi, Maria A Ramos, Renata M A Stapleton, Seth P Vander Zanden, Hannah B Vermeer, Lotus Viera, Daniel H G Dos Santos, Erik A P Santos, Armando J B |
| author_facet | Maurer, Andrew S Horrocks, Julia A Bellini, Claudio Eckert, Karen L Fireman, Alexandra L Fuentes, Mariana M P B Krueger, Barry Levasseur, Kathryn E Marcovaldi, Maria A Ramos, Renata M A Stapleton, Seth P Vander Zanden, Hannah B Vermeer, Lotus Viera, Daniel H G Dos Santos, Erik A P Santos, Armando J B Maurer, Andrew S Horrocks, Julia A Bellini, Claudio Eckert, Karen L Fireman, Alexandra L Fuentes, Mariana M P B Krueger, Barry Levasseur, Kathryn E Marcovaldi, Maria A Ramos, Renata M A Stapleton, Seth P Vander Zanden, Hannah B Vermeer, Lotus Viera, Daniel H G Dos Santos, Erik A P Santos, Armando J B |
| collection | PubMed - marine biology |
| contents | Habitat fidelity in hawksbill sea turtles. Maurer, Andrew S Horrocks, Julia A Bellini, Claudio Eckert, Karen L Fireman, Alexandra L Fuentes, Mariana M P B Krueger, Barry Levasseur, Kathryn E Marcovaldi, Maria A Ramos, Renata M A Stapleton, Seth P Vander Zanden, Hannah B Vermeer, Lotus Viera, Daniel H G Dos Santos, Erik A P Santos, Armando J B Animals Turtles Ecosystem Female Animal Migration Climate change is altering habitat suitability and driving shifts in species distributions. To understand potential responses by mobile animals, it is essential to assess levels of plasticity in habitat use, ranging from transience to long-term fidelity. Here, we evaluate the fidelity of hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) to habitats used while foraging (our primary focus), migrating, and nesting. After satellite tracking 17 adult females from three Western Atlantic nesting areas, we then re-tracked them in a subsequent year. Of 15 turtles with sufficient data to assess interannual foraging area fidelity, 14 returned to the same home range, exhibiting overlap between successive 50% utilization distributions (UDs); the 15th individual shifted |
| format | Artículo científico |
| id | pubmed_41054921 |
| institution | PubMed |
| language | en |
| publishDate | 2025 |
| publisher | Ecology |
| record_format | pubmed |
| spellingShingle | Habitat fidelity in hawksbill sea turtles. Maurer, Andrew S Horrocks, Julia A Bellini, Claudio Eckert, Karen L Fireman, Alexandra L Fuentes, Mariana M P B Krueger, Barry Levasseur, Kathryn E Marcovaldi, Maria A Ramos, Renata M A Stapleton, Seth P Vander Zanden, Hannah B Vermeer, Lotus Viera, Daniel H G Dos Santos, Erik A P Santos, Armando J B Animals Turtles Ecosystem Female Animal Migration Habitat fidelity in hawksbill sea turtles. Maurer, Andrew S Horrocks, Julia A Bellini, Claudio Eckert, Karen L Fireman, Alexandra L Fuentes, Mariana M P B Krueger, Barry Levasseur, Kathryn E Marcovaldi, Maria A Ramos, Renata M A Stapleton, Seth P Vander Zanden, Hannah B Vermeer, Lotus Viera, Daniel H G Dos Santos, Erik A P Santos, Armando J B Animals Turtles Ecosystem Female Animal Migration Climate change is altering habitat suitability and driving shifts in species distributions. To understand potential responses by mobile animals, it is essential to assess levels of plasticity in habitat use, ranging from transience to long-term fidelity. Here, we evaluate the fidelity of hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) to habitats used while foraging (our primary focus), migrating, and nesting. After satellite tracking 17 adult females from three Western Atlantic nesting areas, we then re-tracked them in a subsequent year. Of 15 turtles with sufficient data to assess interannual foraging area fidelity, 14 returned to the same home range, exhibiting overlap between successive 50% utilization distributions (UDs); the 15th individual shifted |
| title | Habitat fidelity in hawksbill sea turtles. |
| topic | Animals Turtles Ecosystem Female Animal Migration |
| url | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41054921/ |