The Interplay of Homing and Dispersal in Green Turtles: A Focus on the Southwestern Atlantic
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2012-10-08
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The Interplay of Homing and Dispersal in Green Turtles: A Focus on the Southwestern Atlantic
Página inicial
792
Página final
805
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Journal of Heredity
Resumo
Current understanding of spatial ecology is insufficient in many threatened marine species, failing to provide a solid basis for
conservation and management. To address this issue for globally endangered green turtles, we investigated their population
distribution by sequencing a mitochondrial control region segment from the Rocas Atoll courtship area (n = 30 males) and
four feeding grounds (FGs) in Brazil (n = 397), and compared our findings to published data (nnesting = 1205; nfeeding = 1587).
At Rocas Atoll, the first Atlantic courtship area sequenced to date, we found males were differentiated from local juveniles but
not from nesting females. In combination with tag data, this indicates possible male philopatry. The most common haplotypes
detected at the study sites were CMA-08 and CMA-05, and significant temporal variation was not revealed. Although feeding
grounds were differentiated overall, intra-regional structure was less pronounced. Ascension was the primary natal source
of the study FGs, with Surinam and Trindade as secondary sources. The study clarified the primary connectivity between
Trindade and Brazil. Possible linkages to African populations were considered, but there was insufficient resolution to conclusively determine this connection. The distribution of FG haplotype lineages was nonrandom and indicative of regional
clustering. The study investigated impacts of population size, geographic distance, ocean currents, and juvenile natal homing
on connectivity, addressed calls for increased genetic sampling in the southwestern Atlantic, and provided data important for
conservation of globally endangered green turtles.