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ESR 55:205-217 (2024)  -  DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/esr01363

Post-nesting migrations of green turtles from Aldabra Atoll, Seychelles: satellite tracking, flipper tag returns and marine protected areas

Heather Richards1,*, Cheryl L. Sanchez1,2, Philip Haupt1,3, Jeanne A. Mortimer1,7, Anne Barat4, Olivier Bousquet4,5, Paolo Casale2, Janske van de Crommenacker1, Martijn van Dinther1, Christopher W. Jones1, Paolo Luschi2, Daig Romain1, Frauke Fleischer Dogley1, Nancy Bunbury1,6

1Seychelles Islands Foundation, Victoria, Mahé, Seychelles
2Department of Biology, University of Pisa, 56126 Pisa, Italy
3Rhodes University, Grahamstown 6140, Eastern Cape, South Africa
4Institute for Coastal and Marine Research, Nelson Mandela University, Port-Elizabeth 6031, South Africa
5LACy, UMR8105, 97490 Saint-Denis de La Réunion, France
6Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall TR10 9FE, UK
7Department of Biology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA
*Corresponding author:

ABSTRACT: To effectively implement protective measures for migratory species such as marine turtles, knowledge of their breeding grounds, foraging areas, migratory pathways and possible threats encountered is required. Aldabra Atoll, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Seychelles, hosts and protects one of the largest nesting populations of green turtles Chelonia mydas in the Western Indian Ocean. We satellite tracked 21 post-nesting green turtles during 2011-2014 (n = 8) and in 2022 (n = 13). Nineteen turtles were tracked beyond Aldabra and took 8-49 d to reach their final recorded locations, travelling 743-2552 km along distinct routes, each taking a unique path to widely dispersed coastal sites in Tanzania, Madagascar, Somalia, Kenya, Mozambique and Seychelles, highlighting the connectivity of the region through one large rookery. When compared to the locations of 54 international flipper tag returns from Aldabra females recorded since the 1980s, there was consistency in the use of Tanzania, Kenya, Mozambique, Somalia and Madagascar as foraging destination countries for Aldabra turtles. However, satellite tracking expanded the countries used as foraging sites to include Seychelles and elevated the relative importance of remote sites for which fishermen were unlikely to report intercepted flipper tags—especially Somalia, northern Madagascar and distant offshore foraging habitat within Seychelles. The end points for >40% of the turtles were within or nearby marine protected areas (MPAs) in Madagascar, Mozambique, Tanzania and Seychelles, 5 (26.3%) within MPAs and 3 (15.8%) <25 km away from MPAs. Eleven (57.9%) turtles travelled through MPAs after leaving the Aldabra protected zone. There is further opportunity to increase the protection and connectivity of foraging areas by expanding existing MPAs. Identifying foraging hot spots within the region by pooling data from other important breeding grounds should be a priority to focus conservation efforts on migratory corridors and the status and state of those foraging areas.


KEY WORDS: Chelonia mydas · Green turtle · Satellite tracking · International flipper tag returns · Marine protected areas · Migration · Marine turtle · Western Indian Ocean


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Cite this article as: Richards H, Sanchez CL, Haupt P, Mortimer JA and others (2024) Post-nesting migrations of green turtles from Aldabra Atoll, Seychelles: satellite tracking, flipper tag returns and marine protected areas. Endang Species Res 55:205-217. https://doi.org/10.3354/esr01363

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