ISTS42 Program/Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions/events of ISTS42. Please select a date or location to show only sessions/events held on that day or location. Please select a single oral or poster session for a detailed view of each submission (includes abstracts).

 
Filter by Session Topic 
Only Sessions at Date / Time 
 
 
Session Overview
Date: Tuesday, 26/Mar/2024
7:00am
-
9:00am
Poster Setup
Location: Napalai D & E
8:00am
-
5:00pm
On-site Registration
Location: Conference Breezeway
8:30am
-
9:45am
Opening Remarks / Ceremony
Location: Napalai A
9:00am
-
5:00pm
Silent Auction / Drop-off Auction Items
Location: Dusit 1

See here for further information

9:00am
-
6:00pm
Exhibitor / Vendors
Location: Napalai D & E
Poster Display
Location: Napalai D & E
 

*Human-wildlife interactions and their consequences for sea turtle health in Malaysia

Syamsyahidah Samsol1, Mohd Uzair Rusli1, Jeethvendra Kirishnamoortie2,4, Hideaki Nishizawa3, Juanita Joseph2,5, Tsung-Hsien Li6

1: Sea Turtle Research Unit, Institute of Oceanography and Environment, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia; 2: Borneo Marine Research Institute, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Malaysia; 3: Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University, Japan; 4: Tropical Research and Conservation Centre, Pom Pom Island, Sabah, Malaysia; 5: Small Islands Research Centre, Faculty of Science and Natural Resources, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Malaysia; 6: National Museum of Marine Biology & Aquarium, Checheng, Pingtung, Taiwan



*Physiological changes in blood parameters of sea turtles across nesting episodes

Afif Aiman Azmi, Faizah Aplop, Mohd Uzair Rusli

Sea Turtle Research Unit, Institute of Oceanography and Environment, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia



Endoscopy and rectal enema for fecal collection in wild sea turtles (Chelonia mydas, Eretmochelys imbricata) in a field setting

Kristina L. Kaleel1, Patricia L. Secoura2, Juan Pablo Muñoz‐Pérez3,4,5,6, Daniela Alarcón‐Ruales3,4,5, Felipe Vallejo6, Cristina Miranda6, Gregory A. Lewbart2,3,4, Kathy A. Townsend5, Shelly L. Vaden2

1: University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine, Gainesville, Florida, USA; 2: The Department of Clinical Sciences, North Carolina State College of Veterinary Medicine, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; 3: Colegio de Ciencias Biológicas y Ambientales (COCIBA), Universidad San Francisco de Quito USFQ, Quito, Ecuador; 4: Galápagos Science Center (GSC), Universidad San Francisco de Quito (USFQ) & UNC‐Chapel Hill Galápagos Science Center (GSC), Galápagos, Ecuador; 5: School of Science, Technology and Engineering, University of the Sunshine Coast UniSC, Hervey Bay, Australia; 6: Equilibrio Azul, Puerto Lopez, Ecuador



Increasing hypoxia progressively slows early embryonic development in the green turtle

David Morton Adams1, Sean A. Williamson1, Roger G. Evans2,3, Richard D. Reina1

1: School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Australia; 2: Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Physiology, Monash University, Australia; 3: Pre-clinical Critical Care Unit, Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Australia



*Loggerhead sea turtle detection of ammonia odors: sensitivity to terrestrial stimuli

Lillian G. Prince, Kayla M. Goforth, Jadyn M. Sethna, Kenneth J. Lohmann, Catherine M. F. Lohmann

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill



*Evaluating the relationship between immune function and reproductive success in nesting turtles

Tiffany M Dawson, Kate L Mansfield

University of Central Florida, United States of America



*Effects of Incubation Factors on Loggerhead Hatchling Condition in the Gulf of Mexico

Allyssa Rose Hennessey1,2, Jake Andrew Lasala2, Frank V Paladino1

1: Purdue University Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States of America; 2: Mote Marine Laboratory, Florida, United States of America



*Acoustic monitoring of nest escaping activity in sea turtle hatchlings

Pey Chen Lim1, Hideaki Nishizawa2, Mohd Uzair Rusli1

1: Sea Turtle Research Unit (SEATRU), Institute of Oceanography and Environment, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu; 2: Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University



Impacts of incubation temperature on loggerhead (Caretta caretta) sea turtle hatchling morphology and hydrodynamics

Alexis Moyle, Sarah Milton

Florida Atlantic University, United States of America



Variations in mean brevetoxin concentrations by tissue type in three Florida sea turtle species

Raschelli A. Linz, Sarah L. Milton

Florida Atlantic University, United States of America



Maximising captive releases of leatherback turtles using insights from simulated growth and reproduction models

Anna Antonia Ortega1,2,4, Nina Marn3, Nicola Mitchell1,2, George Shillinger4

1: The School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Australia; 2: The Oceans Institute, The University of Western Australia, Australia; 3: Rudjer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia; 4: Upwell Turtles, California, United States of America



Non-invasive heart rate measurement of green turtle embryos

Hideaki Nishizawa1, Tomoatsu Ijichi1, Shota Hyodo1, Satomi Kondo2

1: Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University; 2: Everlasting Nature of Asia (ELNA), Ogasawara Marine Center



Plastic ingested by green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) with Fibropapillomatosis (FP)

Rachel Theresa Southards, Heather A. Seaman, Sarah L. Milton

Florida Atlantic University, United States of America



Histological reconstruction of the olive ridley sea turtle hatchling head

Jesus Rodolfo Martin del Campo1, Joy Richman2

1: Universidad del Mar, Oaxaca, Mexico; 2: University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada



Why the long face? Hawksbill foraging strategies when sympatric with green turtles

Jeanette Wyneken1, Michael Salmon1, Tommy Cutt2, Don McGleish2, Alexander Gaos3

1: Florida Atlantic University, United States of America; 2: Marine Institute Maui Ocean Center; 3: Marine Turtle Biology & Assessment Program NOAA Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center



Novel biomarkers of environmental genotoxicity in green turtle (Chelonia mydas) on the coast of Quintana Roo, Mexico.

Aida M. Guevara Meléndez1, Mauricio Comas García2, Leticia Yáñez Estrada3, Vanessa Labrada Martagón4

1: Facultad de Ciencias Agronómicas, Universidad de El Salvador; 2: Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias de la Salud y Biomedicina, Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí; 3: Laboratorio de Género, Salud y Ambiente, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí; 4: Laboratorio Ecología de la Salud, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí



Epibionts associated with nesting females of black turtles (Chelonia mydas agassizii) from the breeding population of Michoacan, Mexico

Cutzi Bedolla-Ochoa1,2, Carlos Delgado-Trejo1,2, Miguel Angel Reyes-López2, Fátima Yedith Camacho-Sánchez2

1: Instituto de Investigaciones sobre los Recursos Naturales, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, México; 2: Centro de Biotecnología Genómica, campus Reynosa, Instituto Politécnico Nacional. México.



Impact of multidrug-resistant bacteria on sea turtles and the marine environment

Daphne Wrobel Goldberg1, Fabio Parra Sellera2, Danny Fuentes-Castillo3

1: Projeto Albatroz, Cabo Frio, Brazil; 2: School of Veterinary Medicine, Metropolitan University of Santos, Santos, SP, Brazil,; 3: Laboratorio de Microbiología Veterinaria, Departamento de Patología y Medicina Preventiva, Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias Universidad de Concepción



Report of a green turtle (Chelonia mydas) impaction due to mangrove propagules in the Philippines

Lowee Lyn Castillo1, Sharah M. Barredo1, Marco Acosta2, Mario Ronda2, Geraldine Benavente2, Ian Echanes3, Jessica Labaja1, Kurt Ivan Mariano1, Glen Gonzales Rebong4, Frances Camille Rivera5, Rizza Araceli F. Salinas6, Alessandro Ponzo1

1: Large Marine Vertebrates Research Institute Philippines, Philippines; 2: Port Barton Marine Park (PBMP), San Vicente Palawan, Philippines; 3: Municipal Agriculturist Office, San Vicente, Palawan, Philippines; 4: Palawan Wildlife Rescue and Conservation Center - Crocodile Farm in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan; 5: Oceanus Conservation, Manila, Philippines; 6: Department of Environment and Natural Resources Biodiversity Management Bureau, Quezon City, Manila.



Clinical and pathological findings of a geriatric green turtle maintained in captivity with restricted water circulation: a case report

Chayanis Daochai1, Saransiri Nuanmanee2, Rattanakorn Phakphien3, Khunanont Thongcham3, Ratchakul Wiriyaprom1, Watcharapol Suyapoh1

1: Faculty of Veterinary Science, Prince of Songkla University, Thailand; 2: Songkhla Aquatic Animal Health Research and Development Center, Department of Fisheries, Thailand; 3: Marine and Coastal Resources Research Center (Lower Gulf of Thailand), Department of Marine and Coastal Resources, Thailand



Evaluating the sub-lethal effects of red tide blooms and brevetoxin exposure on nesting loggerhead sea turtles

Kelly A. Sloan1, Andrew Glinsky2, Jack Brzoza1, Nicole I. Stacy3, Paul Julian4, Simona A. Ceriani5, Susan Fogelson6, Justin R. Perrault7

1: Sanibel Captiva Conservation Foundation, United States of America; 2: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; 3: College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida; 4: Everglades Foundation; 5: Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute; 6: Fishhead Labs; 7: Loggerhead Marineline Center



Characterisation of gastrointestinal tract disorders in relation to marine debris in sea turtles using postmortem computed tomography

Brian Chin Wing Kot, Tabris Yik To Chung, Henry Chun Lok Tsui

Department of Infectious Diseases and Public Health, Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, City University of Hong Kong, China



*Characterizing harmful algal bloom-associated biotoxin concentrations and chelonid alphaherpesvirus 5 presence in the blood of nesting leatherbacks in Palm Beach County, Florida, USA

Raschelli Anna-Elizabeth Linz1, Annie Page2, Justin R. Perrault3, Sarah L. Milton1

1: Florida Atlantic University, United States of America; 2: Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, United States of America; 3: Loggerhead Marinelife Center, United States of America



Implications of low hatchling production from hatcheries for sea turtle populations in India

Arushi Arora, Jayant Pande, Andrea D. Phillott

FLAME University, Pune, India



Protecting Indonesia's largest green sea turtle nesting rookery: A two-decade retrospective and key insights

Thomas Reischig1, Muhamad Jayuli2, Rusli Andar2, Meriussoni Zai2, Jatmiko Wiwoho2, Hiltrud Cordes1

1: Turtle Foundation, Cologne, Germany; 2: Yayasan Penyu Indonesia, Denpasar, Indonesia



People’s perceptions on the conservation of sea turtles and their associated habitats along the Ponta do Ouro-Kosi Bay Transfrontier Conservation Area, Mozambique and South Africa, south-eastern Africa

Cristina Louro1, Ronel Nel1, Linda Harris1, Sue Ranger2, Peter Richardson2, Bronwyn James3

1: Nelson Mandela University, South Africa; 2: Marine Conservation Society, United Kingdom; 3: Nature Connect, South Africa



Community-led conservation: A decade of success in marine turtle volunteer programs in Vietnam

Thi Thu Hien Bui, The Cuong Chu

Marine and Coastal Program, IUCN Vietnam



Protecting sea turtles through the Bern Convention

Nikolaos Simantiris, Konstantina Andreanidou, George Sampson

MEDASSET-Mediterranean Association to Save the Sea Turtles, Greece



Accuracy of local communities in identifying leatherback turtle nest locations at Jeen Yessa beach in the Bird's Head region of Papua, Indonesia

Petrus Pieter Batubara1, Deasy Natalia Lontoh1, Yusup Adrian Jentewo1, Yairus Swabra1, Arfiandra Andika Wanaputra1, Fitryanti Pakiding1,2, Manjula Tiwari3

1: Science for Conservation Program, Research and Community Service Institute of Universitas Papua, Manokwari, Papua Barat 98314, Indonesia; 2: Department of Agricultural Technology, Universitas Papua, Manokwari, Papua Barat 98314, Indonesia; 3: Ocean Ecology Network, Research Affiliate of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, La Jolla, California 92037, USA



InGeNi-Caretta project: management of emerging nesting sites of loggerhead sea turtles, based on scientific knowledge and coordination between Mediterranean Spanish regions.

Irene Alvarez de Quevedo1, Mireia Aguilera1, Eduardo Belda2, Luis Cardona3, Carles Carreras4, Adolfo Marco5, Marta Pascual4, Cinta Pegueroles4, Jesús Tomás6, Elena Abella1

1: BETA Tech Center, TECNIO Network, University of Vic-Central University of Catalonia (UVic-UCC), C. de Roda 70, 08500, Vic, Spain.; 2: Institut d’Investigació per a la Gestió de Zones Costaneres (IGIC), Universitat Politècnica de València, València, Spain; 3: Departament de Biologia Evolutiva, Ecologia i Ciències Ambientals, Universitat de Barcelona (UB), Av. Diagonal 643, 08028, Barcelona, Spain; 4: Department of Genetics, Microbiology and Statistics and IrBio, University of Barcelona, Avinguda Diagonal 643, E-08028, Barcelona, Spain; 5: Estación Biológica de Doñana, CSIC, C/ Américo Vespucio s/n, Sevilla. Spain; 6: Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, University of Valencia, Apdo. 22085, E-46071, Valencia, Spain



From Poachers to Protectors: A community based approach on sea turtle conservation in the Lamu Archipelago, Kenya

Annabelle Brooks1, Teresa Jahangir2, Famau Shukry2, Atwaa Salim2, Carol Korschen2

1: The Manda Projects, Manda, Lamu, Kenya; 2: Lamu Marine Conservation Trust, Shela, Lamu, Kenya



Ras Baridi Turtle Conservation Initiative (RBTCI): a comprehensive Saudi Arabian approach for long-term conservation

Abdulrazaq Alatawi, Ali Algohane, Ali Alfaidi, Roxanne Whelan, Ricardo Ramalho, Hector Barrios-Garrido

Beacon Development, KAUST Innovation. KAUST. Saudi Arabia.



A comprehensive review of sea turtle nesting rookeries along Bangladesh coast

Mohammad Zahirul Islam1,3, Mohammad Sazedul Islam2, M. Foysal Ehsan4, Rafat Adnan5, Fariat Muntaha6

1: Marinelife Alliance, Bangladesh,; 2: Wilderness Conservation Research Centre, Australia; 3: Tropical Marinelife Center, Bangladesh; 4: EnvirosoftBD, Bangladesh; 5: Wilderness Conservation, Bangladesh; 6: Chattogram Veterinary & Animal Sciences University, Bangladesh



*Evaluating the sustainability of common approaches to sea turtle conservation.

Amanda Elaine Robbins1, Ronel Nel1, Andrea D Phillott2, Andrea Saayman3, Judy Mann-Lang4

1: Nelson Mandela University, Gqeberha, South Africa; 2: FLAME University, Pune, India; 3: North-West University, Potchefstroom, South Africa; 4: Two Ocean Aquarium Foundation, South Africa



*Addressing bycatch through fishermen’s wives and children in the Kingdom of Morocco

Wafae Benhardouze1, Mustapha Aksissou1, John Dutton2, Manjula Tiwari3

1: FACULTY OF SCIENCES TETOUAN, Morocco; 2: Ocean Ecology Network, California, USA; 3: Ocean Ecology Network, Research Affiliate of NOAA—Southwest Fisheries Science Center, California, USA



Imagine that you are a sea turtle: Development of an early childhood learning activity

Andrea D. Phillott1, Aditi Renake1, Anuradha Batabyal1, Karishma Modi2, Melissa Coyle3, Prerana Shet4, Seh Ling Long5, Viraj Shah1, Wid Zuriana Wan Sulaiman5, Zameela Ahmed6

1: FLAME University, Pune, India; 2: Dakshin Endeavours, Bengaluru, India; 3: Independent Consultant, Rockhampton, Australia; 4: National Institute of Oceanography, Goa, India; 5: Perhentian Turtle Project, Perhentian Islands, Malaysia; 6: Live & Learn Environmental Education, Malé, Maldives



Addressing online trade of turtleshell products in Indonesia

Joana Nicolau1, Muhamad Jayuli2, Rosek Nursaid3, Hiltrud Cordes4, Meriussoni Zai2, Thomas Reischig4, Jatmiko Wiwoho2

1: Fundação Tartaruga; 2: Yayasan Penyu Indonesia; 3: Profauna; 4: Turtle Foundation



"Show us the turtle, learn the story": An interactive platform for personalised engagement with sea turtle conservation in a Mediterranean tourist hotspot

Kostas Papafitsoros1,2, Vincent Tarrit2,3, Lukas Adam4, Anna Stamatiou5, Galini Samlidou2, Aliki Panagopoulou2

1: Queen Mary University of London; 2: ARCHELON, the Sea Turtle Protection Society of Greece; 3: School of Engineering and Management Vaud; 4: Czech Technical University; 5: MEDASSET, Mediterranean Association to Save the Sea Turtles



Improved knowledge and capacity to combat sea turtle illegal trade, Cabo Verde

Alberto Queiruga1, Albert Taxonera2, Ukie Resende3, Christophe Eizaguirre4, Olavo da Luz2

1: Biosfera, Cabo Verde; 2: Projeto Biodiversidade, Cabo Verde; 3: Fundação Tartaruga, Cabo Verde; 4: University Queen Mary of London, England



Communicating Without Borders Or How to overcome language, cultural and proximity barriers to increase a project’s outreach

Efi Starfa1, Wassim Amdrous2, Nikolaos Simantiris1

1: MEDASSET-Mediterranean Association to Save the Sea Turtles, Greece; 2: WWF North Africa, Tunisia



Update on community outreach towards sea turtle conservation at Kalpitiya peninsula of Sri Lanka from 2020 to 2023.

Lalith Ekanayake, Yamuna Karunarathna, Kavishka Ekanayake, M.J.A. Nazeer

Bio Conservation Society (BCSL), Sri Lanka



Reducing poaching in Sal Island: a wide approach beyond traditional beach patrols

Artur Lopes, Kirsten Fairweather, Berta Renom, Anice Lopes, Albert Taxonera

Associação Projeto Biodiversidade, Sal Island, Cabo Verde



*Seatru public viewing lab: bridging science and society

Tuan Emilia Tuan Mohd Noor1, Nur Izyani Amrang1,2, Lyvia Chong1, Nadhirah Syafiqah Suhaimi1, Mohd Uzair Rusli1

1: Sea Turtle Research Unit (SEATRU), Institute of Oceanography and Environment, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia.; 2: Conservation Management Solutions SDN BHD, Institue of Oceanography and Environment, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia.



The first Workshop on Veterinary Medicine for Sea Turtles in Colombia

Gilberto Rafael Borges Guzmán1,2,3, Albert Bassols Garcia3, Karen Pabón-Aldana4,5, Karen Novoa4,5, Sandra Barrera4,5, Jorge Bernal Gutiérrez4,5, Aminta Jauregui4,5

1: Fundación AVISTA, Venezuela; 2: Fundación Científica Los Roques, Venezuela; 3: Asociación Mexicana de Veterinarios de Tortugas; 4: Programa de Conservación de Tortugas y Mamíferos Marinos, Colombia; 5: Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano



Building local capacity for natural heritage conservation. Chelonia mydas in Sinaloa, Mexico.

Marla Dublyn Diaz-Gámez1, Melina Maldonado-Sandoval3, Alan Alfredo Zavala-Norzagaray2, Alejandra Sandoval-Lugo1,2

1: Universidad Autónoma de Occidente, Mexico; 2: Instituto Politécnico Nacional; 3: Grupo Tortuguero de las Californias



Evaluation by the community on educational signboards for sea turtle conservation in Cambodia

Tharamony Ngoun, Chandara Tak, Matthew Glue

Fauna & Flora, Cambodia



Benefits of House of Learning, an after-school program as part of a marine turtle conservation effort, to local students

Alberto Y. T. Allo1,2, Kartika Zohar2, Fitryanti Pakiding2,3

1: Department of Education, Universitas Papua, Manokwari, Papua Barat, 98314; 2: Science for Conservation Program, Research and Community Service Institute of Universitas Papua, Manokwari, Papua Barat 98314; 3: Department of Agricultural Technology, Universitas Papua, Manokwari, Papua Barat 98314



Community-based sea turtle bycatch mitigation in southwest Cambodia

Srey Oun Ith1, Srey Thai Sem1, Phallin Chea1, Sopheap Tum2

1: Wild Earth Allies, Cambodia; 2: Fisheries Administration, Cambodia



Mitigating loggerhead turtle bycatch in southern Peru: a collaborative ‘fisher scientist’ initiative

Mariela Pajuelo1,2, Sergio Pingo2, Eliana Alfaro2, Astrid Jimenez2, Javier Quiñones3, Jeffrey Mangel2, Joanna Alfaro-Shigueto2,4

1: Florida Museum, University of Florida, USA; 2: Pro Delphinus, Peru; 3: Instituto del Mar del Peru, Peru; 4: Universidad Científica del Sur, Peru



*Plastic marine debris in stranded sea turtles in Florida, U.S.A.

Heather A Seaman, Sarah L Milton

Florida Atlantic University, United States of America



*A scoping review on the impact of beach plastics on sea turtles, eggs, and hatchlings

Aditi Renake, Andrea D. Phillott

FLAME University, Pune, India



*Incidental by-catch of sea turtles in coastal and offshore fishery in Kalpitiya Peninsula, Sri Lanka: Assessment of fisher knowledge, practices and attitudes

Tharushi Ekanayake1, Shwetha Abeywarna1, Rajitha. K. Subasinghe2, Lalith Ekanayake1, R.S. Rajakaruna3

1: Bio Conservation Society (BCSL), Sri Lanka; 2: Bialik College Limited, Hawthorn Victoria, Australia.; 3: Department of Zoology, University of Peradeniya.



*Analysis of potential threats to marine turtles in Venezuela: a bibliometric analysis

Irama Beatriz Perozo-Díaz1,2, Verónica de Los Llanos Romero3, Natalie Elizabeth Wildermann1,2,6, Héctor Alonso Barrios-Garrido1,2,4,5

1: Laboratorio de Ecología General, Departamento de Biología, Centro de Modelado Científico (CMC) de La Universidad del Zulia; Maracaibo, Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.; 2: Grupo de Trabajo en Tortugas Marinas del Golfo de Venezuela (GTTM-GV); 3: vdelosllanos@gmail.com; 4: TropWATER, Centre for Tropical Water and Aquatic Ecosystem Research; College of Marine and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland 4811, Australia,; 5: KAUST Beacon Development; King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwal, 23955, Saudi Arabia.; 6: Red Sea Research Center; King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), 23955,. Saudi Arabia.



*By-catch(ing your help for the protection) of sea turtles in the East Central Atlantic

Andrea Fariñas-Bermejo1,2, Ana Liria-Loza2, Alejandro Suárez-Pérez3, Graham J. Pierce1

1: Institute of Marine Research, Spanish National Research Council (IIM-CSIC) (Galicia, Spain); 2: ADS Biodiversidad (Las Palmas, Spain); 3: Department of Pathology and Food Technology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas, Spain)



Spatio-temporal distribution and associated threats of Loggerhead turtle strandings in Uruguay (2000-2023)

Gabriela Manuela Velez-Rubio1,2,3, Paula Marin Acevedo1, Alejandro Fallabrino1

1: NGO Karumbe; 2: Facultad de Ciencias-Udelar, Uruguay; 3: Programa de Desarrollo de Ciencias Básicas (PEDECIBA), Uruguay



Frequency of vessel strike injuries in sea turtle strandings along Sanibel and Captiva Island, Florida, U.S.A.

Jack W. Brzoza1, Andrew T. Glinsky2, Savannah M. Weber1, Kelly A. Sloan1

1: Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation (Sanibel Island, Florida, U.S.A.); 2: Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research (Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.A.)



Beach cliffs as an emerging hazard to nesting sea turtles in the face of sea-level rise

Natalie E. Wildermann1,2,3, Hector Barrios-Garrido4, Khuld Jabby5, Royale S. Hardenstine5, Takahiro Shimada6, Ivor Williams5, Carlos M. Duarte1,2,3

1: Biological and Environmental Science and Engineering Division, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology; Thuwal, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.; 2: Red Sea Research Center, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology; Thuwal, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.; 3: Computational Bioscience Research Center, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology; Thuwal, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.; 4: Beacon Department, KAUST Innovation; Thuwal, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.; 5: Red Sea Zone Authority, Red Sea Global; Tawala, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.; 6: Aquatic Threatened Species Program, Department of Environment and Science; Moggill, Australia.



Investigating trends in cause-specific sea turtle strandings and mortality in the U.S. Virgin Islands: 2018-2023

Taylor Brunson1, Claudia D. Lombard2, Kelly R. Stewart3, Sean Kelly1

1: Division of Fish and Wildlife, Department of Planning and Natural Resources, Government of the Virgin Islands, USVI; 2: U.S. Fishing and Wildlife Service, USA; 3: The Ocean Foundation, Washington DC USA



Ten years of marine turtle strandings in Palawan, Philippines: from historical data to action planning

Sharah Marie Barredo1, Myla Adriano2, Mark Philip Acosta3, Ariana Agustines1, Lorraine Aplasca1, Geraldine Benavente3, Titus Canete1, Lowee Lyn Castillo1, Lyca Sandrea Castro4, Rufino Clavecilla5, Karen Mae C. Galabay6, Floredel D. Galon7, Jessica Labaja1, Teodoro Jose S. Matta8, Ethan Manasan1, Rene Manibale9, Dixie Marinas10, Curt Ivan Mariano1, Azell Montederamos1, Arty Moreno10, Jhonamie A. Mabuhay Omar4, Clarissa Pador11, Glenn Gonzales Rebong12, Rizza Araceli F. Salinas13, Sally Snow1, Ma. Vivian Soriano14, Mildred Suza15, Dwight Justley G. Ulep6, AA Yaptinchay16, Alessandro Ponzo1

1: Large Marine Vertebrates Research Institute Philippines, Philippines; 2: City Environment and Natural Resources Office, Puerto Princesa City, Palawan.; 3: Port Barton Marine Park (PBMP), San Vicente, Palawan, Philippines; 4: College of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, Western Philippines University- Puerto Princesa Campus, Puerto Princesa City, Palawan.; 5: Municipal Agriculture Office, San Vicente, Palawan; 6: University of Manila, Metro Manila.; 7: Palawan State University, Puerto Princesa City, Palawan.; 8: Palawan Council for Sustainable Development, Puerto Princesa City, Palawan; 9: Alimanguan Sagip Pawikan, San Vicente, Palawan; 10: Club Agutaya, San Vicente, Palawan Campus Puerto Princesa City, Palawan.; 11: Protected Area Management Office, Malampaya Sound Protected Landscape and Seascape, Taytay, Palawan, Philippines; 12: Palawan Wildlife Rescue and Conservation Center - Crocodile Farm in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan; 13: Department of Environment and Natural Resources Biodiversity Management Bureau, Quezon City, Manila.; 14: Community Environment and Natural Resources Office, Puerto Princesa City, Palawan.; 15: Protected Area Management Office, El Nido-Taytay Managed Resource Protected Area,, Palawan; 16: Marine Wildlife Watch of the Philippines, Makati City, Manila.



Fatal shark attack on a loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) found stranded off the coast of the Strait of Gibraltar, Spain.

Carolina Fernández - Maldonado1, Alejandra Cerezo Caro1, Cristian Suárez-Santana2, Martín Cara Egea1, Antonio Fernández2

1: Seashore Environment and Fauna, Tarifa, Cádiz, Spain; 2: Atlantic Cetacean Research Center, Veterinary Histology and Pathology, Institute of Animal Health (IUSA), Veterinary School, University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (ULPGC), Trasmontaña, s/n, 35413 Arucas, Las Palmas, Spain



Sea turtles, sea users and collisions: how to improve monitoring and cohabitation in Reunion Island, Indian Ocean?

Anne Emmanuelle Landes1, Charline Fisseau1, Claire Jean2, Mathieu Barret2, Sylvain Delaspre1, Stéphane Ciccione2

1: CEDTM, Réunion (France); 2: Kelonia, l'observatoire des tortues marines, Réunion (France)



The use of Circle Hooks to mitigate loggerhead Bycatch in bottom longline off the Gulf of Gabès

Imed Jribi1, Achraf Chouaibi1, Arij Sadraoui1, Asma Chaabane1, Hamed Mallat1, Maissa Louhichi1, Wiem Boussellaa1, Zouhour Bouain1, Mohamed Nejmeddine Bradai2

1: FSS, Tunisia; 2: ASCOB-Syrtis, Sfax, Tunisia



Nine years of stranding data for sea turtles in the northern Gulf of Mexico

Tabitha Renee Siegfried

Gulfarium CARE Center



*Foraging patterns of more nourished green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) migrating to high latitudes in Japan

Megumi Kawai1, Kazunari Kameda2, Lyu Lyu1, Tomoko Narazaki3, Takuya Fukuoka4, Katsufumi Sato1

1: The University of Tokyo, Japan; 2: Kuroshima Research Station, Sea Turtle Association of Japan; 3: Meijo University, Japan; 4: Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan



*Spatial ecology and conservation of foraging green turtles in the Northern Territory, Australia

Natalie Robson

Charles Darwin University, Australia



*Habitat mapping reveals resident areas and movement patterns of nesting leatherback sea turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) in St. Croix USVI

Arona N. Bender1, Christina I. Mauney2, Corey D. Garza3, Peter H. Dutton4, Claudia D. Lombard5, Andrew J. Read1, Kelly R. Stewart6

1: Duke University Marine Science & Conservation Division, Beaufort, NC 28516; 2: NCCOS Beaufort Laboratory, Beaufort, NC 28516; 3: University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195; 4: NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center Marine Mammal and Turtle Division, La Jolla, CA 92037; 5: US Fish and Wildlife Service, Frederiksted, VI 00840; 6: St. Croix Sea Turtle Project, The Ocean Foundation, Washington DC 20036



*Using an unoccupied aerial vehicle (UAV) to assess seasonal abundances of megafauna in front of an important sea turtle nesting beach in Costa Rica

Adam Yaney-Keller1, Verónica Valverde-Cantillo2,3, Diego Fallas-Madrigal2, Pilar Santidrían Tomilo3,4, Nathan J. Robinson5

1: School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Australia; 2: Escuela de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Nacional, Heredia, Costa Rica; 3: The Leatherback Trust, Goldring-Gund Marine Biology Station, Playa Grande, Costa Rica; 4: Animal Demography and Ecology Unit, GEDA, Institut Mediterrani d’Estudis Avançats (CSIC-UIB), Miquèl Marques 21, 01790, Esporles, Spain; 5: Institut de Ciències del Mar, Spanish National Research Council - Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Barcelona, Spain



Decades-long monitoring of an individual male loggerhead sea turtle: AAJ723

Annessia Marie Michaels, Michael Bresette, Jeff Guertin, Cody Mott

Inwater Research Group, United States of America



Fishery discards and long-term changes in the diet of loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) in the western Mediterranean as revealed by gut contents and bulk and compound specific stable isotope analyses

Luis Cardona1, Francisco Javier Aznar2, Maria Bas3, Jesús Tomás3

1: University of Barcelona, Spain; 2: Cavanilles Institute of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, University of Valencia, Spain; 3: Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC), Spain



Coming out of their shells: Repeatable social preferences in green sea turtles, Chelonia mydas

Amy Feakes1,2, Julian Gervolino1, Isha Afeef1,3, Emma Cavan2, Stephanie Köhnk1, Jamie Dunning2

1: Olive Ridley Project, 91 Padiham Road, Sadben, Clitheroe, Lancashire, BB7 9EX UK; 2: Faculty of Natural Sciences, Department of Life Sciences (Silwood Park), Imperial College London, Berkshire, UK; 3: Olive Ridley Project Maldives, H. Kaneerumaage, Dhonhuraa Goalhi, Malé, 20037, Republic of Maldives



The Florida hawksbill project: A twenty-year review

Lawrence D. Wood, Anna Bennett

National Save The Sea Turtle Foundation, United States of America



Seagrass meadow collapse due to overgrazing green turtles in the Ryukyu Islands, Japan

Junichi Okuyama1, Naoya Noguchi2, Hideaki Nishizawa2, Iwao Tanita1, Sachia Sasano1, Motoya Tamaki1

1: Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Japan; 2: Kyoto University, Japan



Residence of Male Black Sea turtles (Chelonia mydas agassizii) at Nesting Areas in Michoacan, México.

Carlos Delgado-Trejo1,2, Cutzi Bedolla-Ochoa1,2, Miguel Angel Reyes-López2, Fátima Yedith Camacho-Sánchez2

1: Instituto de Investigaciones sobre los Recursos Naturales,Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, Mexico; 2: Centro de Biotecnología Genómica, Campus Reynosa, IPN



Habitat selection of post-nesting loggerhead turtles in the Northwest Pacific

Kei Okamoto, Haruka Hayashi, Shintaro Ueno, Daisuke Ochi

Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Fisheries Resources Institute, Japan



Insights on sea turtle behavior and habitat use in New York’s coastal waters from movement tags deployed on rehabilitated animals

Joseph D. Warren1, Charleigh Kilgallon1, Maxinne A. Montello1,2

1: Stony Brook University, United States of America; 2: New York Marine Rescue Center, United States of America



Tracking male turtles from Kyparissia Bay, Western Greece, the largest loggerhead rookery in the Mediterranean

ALan F. Rees1, Tasos Dimalexis2, Odysseas Paxinos3, Panos Batzios4, George Mikoniatis5, Yannis Vavassis5

1: Turtles from Above, Plymouth, UK; 2: Nature Conservation Consultants (NCC) Ltd, Athens, Greece; 3: MOm/Hellenic Society for the Study and Protection of the Monk Seal, Athens, Greece; 4: BIOTOPIA GP, Athens, Greece; 5: HELLENiQ UPSTREAM S.A., HELLENiQ ENERGY Holdings S.A., Athens, Greece



A multidisciplinary approach give insight on loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta, Linneus 1758) trophic ecology in the Tyrrhenian Sea (Central Mediterranean)

Monica Francesca Blasi

Filicudi Wildlife Conservation, Italy



Olive ridley internesting behaviour in northeast Brazil based on high resolution tracking data

A C C Melo1, A J B Santos1,4, R S Garcia1, C Pulita1, F L C Oliveira1, M I Weber1, A C D Silva1, E L Fonseca1, R M A Ramos2, E A P Santos3

1: Fundação Projeto Tamar, Brazil; 2: Engeo Soluções Integradas Ltda, Brazil; 3: Centro TAMAR-ICMBio, Brazil; 4: Florida State University, United States of America



On battered reefs - insights into foraging of hawksbill turtles at known hotspots in the Maldives

Enas Mohamed Riyaz1, Ahmed Leevan1, Afrah Abdul-Sathaar2, Isha Afeef2, Ali Shareef3, Aishath Shaiha1, Ibrahim Inaan2, M.M.R Polyak4, Stephanie Köhnk4

1: Environmental Protection Agency, Handhuvaree Hingun, Malé, Republic of Maldives; 2: Olive Ridley Project Maldives, H. Kaneerumaage, Dhonhuraa Goalhi, Malé, 20037, Republic of Maldives; 3: Happy Side, K. Maafushi, 08090, Republic of Maldives; 4: Olive Ridley Project, 91 Padiham Road, Sadben, Clitheroe, Lancashire, BB7 9EX UK



Dispersal of nesting marine turtles from NEOM Islands, Saudi Arabia, after breeding

Hector Barrios-Garrido1, Abdulrazaq Alatawi2, August Santillan2, Enjey Ghazzawi3, Abdulaziz Alkaboor2, Mishari Alghrair4, Paul Marshall4, Deni Porej4, Ricardo Ramalho2

1: Beacon Development, KAUST Innovation. KAUST. Saudi Arabia. University of Zulia, Venezuela. TropWATER, Australia; 2: Beacon Development, KAUST Innovation. KAUST. Saudi Arabia; 3: Education, Research, and Innovation. NEOM. Saudi Arabia; 4: Nature Reserve, NEOM. Saudi Arabia



First island wide survey of hawksbill sea turtles, Eretmochelys imbricata, in the waters of St John, U.S. Virgin Islands

Paul Jobsis1, Scott Eanes2, William {Alex} Webb2

1: Univ. of the Virgin Islands, Virgin Islands, U.S.; 2: The Hawksbill Project



Evaluating resource use patterns and partitioning in relation to changing prey abundance in co-occurring sea turtle species using molecular isotope geochemistry

Matthew D. Ramirez1,2,3, Justine Intemann-Milligan4, Larisa Avens5, Matthew H. Godfrey6,7,8, Susan G. Barco9, Kelton W. McMahon1

1: Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI 02882 USA; 2: Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina 28403 USA; 3: Center for Marine Science, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina 28409 USA; 4: Department of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA; 5: National Marine Fisheries Service, Southeast Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Beaufort Laboratory, Beaufort, NC, 28516 USA; 6: North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, Beaufort, NC, 28516 United States; 7: Duke Marine Laboratory, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke University, Beaufort, NC, 28516 United States; 8: Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, 27607 United States; 9: Virginia Aquarium & Marine Science Center, Virginia Beach, VA 23451 United States



Green turtle photo-identification improves mark-recapture efforts and provides evidence of habitat connectivity and fine-scale ontogenetic shifts

Annabelle Brooks1, Hannah Virgin2, Stephen Dunbar3,4, Dustin Baumbach4, Liberty Boyd2, Stephen Connett5, Ryley Mayoras2, Elizabeth Whitman2

1: Cape Eleuthera Institute, PO Box EL-62029, Rock Sound, Eleuthera, The Bahamas; 2: Institute of Environment, Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, North Miami, Florida, USA; 3: Marine Research Group, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA 92350 USA; 4: Protective Turtle Ecology Center for Training, Outreach, and Research, Inc. (ProTECTOR, Inc.); 5: Family Island Research and Education, Archie Carr Center for Sea Turtle Research



*Role of sea turtle eggs as a marine originated organic matter in the diet of terrestrial invertebrate ghost crabs

Hirotaka Tajima1,2, Hideaki Nishizawa3, Manabu Kume4, Junichi Okuyama5, Hiromichi Mitamura1,2,4

1: Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan; 2: Distinguished Doctoral Program of Platforms (WISE), Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan; 3: Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan; 4: Field Science Education and Research Center, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan; 5: Fisheries Technology Institute, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Okinawa, Japan



*Change in clutch depth and reproductive success of late-season green turtle (Chelonia mydas) nests on the East-Central Florida coast, USA

Olivia J. Hardway, M.S. Moonstone, E. E. Seney, K. L. Mansfield

University of Central Florida's Marine Turtle Research Group, United States of America



*Long-term trends in reproductive output of marine turtles on the Archie Carr National Wildlife Refuge, Florida, USA

Jeena Prasertlum, Erin E. Seney, Kate L. Mansfield

University of Central Florida Marine Turtle Research Group, United States of America



*Loggerhead sea turtle hatchling size: then and now

Abigail Crowder, Erin Seney, Kate Mansfield

University of Central Florida, United States of America



*Emergence success of leatherback sea turtles in a changing climate on the Archie Carr National Wildlife Refuge, Florida, USA

Brianna Madison Nardelli, Jeena Prasertlum, Erin E Seney, Kate L Mansfield

UCF Marine Turtle Research Group, United States of America



*Determining incubation duration and reproductive success of late-season loggerhead (Caretta caretta) and green turtle (Chelonia mydas) nests on the East-Central Florida coast, USA

Merope S Moonstone, Olivia J Hardway, Matt E Larsen, Kate L Mansfield, Erin E Seney

University of Central Florida's Marine Turtle Research Group, United States of America



*Nesting ecology of leatherback turtles at buru island, indonesia

Retno Kusuma Ningrum1,2, Muhammad Idham Farsha3, Rendra Kurniawan3, Ranny Yuneni3, Yuliana Syamsuni3, Alexander R Gaos4, John Wang4, Michael Osmond5, Shaya Honarvar1,2

1: School of Life Sciences, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, 3190 Maile Way, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96822, USA; 2: Pacific Cooperative Studies Unit, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, 3190 Maile Way, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96822, USA; 3: Yayasan WWF-Indonesia, Marine and Fisheries Program, Jl. Pemuda 1 No.2 Renon, Bali 80226, Indonesia; 4: NOAA Fisheries, Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, 1845 Wasp Boulevard, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96818, USA; 5: World Wildlife Fund (WWF) US, Washington DC 20037-1193, USA



*Nesting trends of leatherback, green, and olive ridley sea turtles at Parque Nacional Marino Las Baulas, Costa Rica

Isabel Rodriguez1, Faridah Fatungase1, Pilar Santidrian Tomillo2, Frank V Paladino1

1: Purdue University Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA; 2: The Leatherback Trust, Goldring Marine Biology Station, Playa Grande, Costa Rica



Closing the knowledge gap: Contributing data from Sumatra about the Northeastern Indian Ocean leatherback sea turtle subpopulation

Meriussoni Zai1, Thomas Reischig2, Sarif Hidayat3, Thomas Amey4, Hiltrud Cordes2

1: Yayasan Penyu Indonesia, Indonesia; 2: Turtle Foundation, Germany; 3: Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries of the Republic of Indonesia; 4: Ecosystem Impact, Indonesia



Running out of sand: Sea turtle nesting activity on Félicité Island, Seychelles

Lara Kalisch, Martin Stelfox, Stephanie Köhnk

Olive Ridley Project, 91 Padiham Road, Sadben, Clitheroe, Lancashire, BB7 9EX UK



Which threats affect hatching success of the hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) in Fiji?

Shritika Shayal Prakash1,3, Ashmeeta Shalvina2, Ana Ciriyawa1, Susanna Piovano1

1: Discipline of Marine Studies, SAGEONS, The University of the South Pacific, Laucala Campus, Suva, Fiji; 2: Discipline of Biological and Chemical Sciences, SAGEONS, The University of the South Pacific, Laucala Campus, Suva, Fiji; 3: Present address: Ika Bula Consultants, Suva, Fiji



An increased risk of predation for Caretta caretta nests in Calabria (Southern Italy)

Chiara Mancino1,2, Maria Denaro2, Pietro Giovannelli2, Eshna Gomes2, Romano Liotti2, Teresa Malito2, Giovanni Parise2, Salvatore Urso2

1: Sapienza University, Italy; 2: Caretta Calabria Conservation, Italy



Hatching success and sex ratios of Chelonia mydas nests in Lang Tengah Island, Malaysia

Azrin Asyikin Mohd Shukor1,2, Tze Ning Cheok1,4, Seh Ling Long1,3

1: Lang Tengah Turtle Watch, Lang Tengah Island, Terengganu, Malaysia; 2: (PULIHARA) Marine Conservation and Research Organisation, Malaysia; 3: TRAFICC International Southeast Asia; 4: Scuba Junkie SEAS



Loggerheads nesting in France mainland and Corsica in 2023: an exceptional year or the beginning of a new story?

Anthony Caro1, Sidonie Catteau2, Cathy Cesarini3, Françoise Claro4, Céline Ferlat5, Jacques Fretey6, Delphine Gambaiani5, Alexandre Girard4, Marc Girondot7, Antony Martinez9, Claude Miaud8, Pierre Moisson9, Jean-Baptiste Sénégas5, Charlène Thévenet9

1: Office Français pour la Biodiversité; 2: Association Marineland, Antibes; 3: Association CARI (Cétacés Association Recherche Insulaire) and Société Herpétologique de France, Réseau Tortues Marines de Méditerranée Française; 4: UMS PatriNat, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle de Paris; 5: Centre d'Etude et de Sauvegarde des Tortues Marines de Méditerranée; 6: Association Chélonée; 7: Ecologie, Systématique, Evolution, Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, AgroParisTech, France; 8: CEFE, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE-PSL University, IRD; 9: A Cupulatta, Vero, Corse



First years of monitoring three potential key beaches for sea turtles on the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica.

Lucia Heredero Saura, Laura Exley, George Grimmett

COPROT, Costa Rica



Is there a future for loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta, Linneus 1758) nesting in the Aeolian Archipelago (Southern Italy)?

Monica Francesca Blasi, Vittoria Fiandino, Michelle Gelippi

Filicudi Wildlife Conservation, Italy



Leatherback haven in the Indian Ocean

Adhith Swaminathan1, Saw Thesorow1, Sushil Lakra1, Dr. Kartik Shanker1,2

1: Dakshin Foundation, Bangalore, India; 2: Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India



Explorers and residents: dichotomic nesting and internesting behaviour of loggerhead sea turtles colonising the western Mediterranean

Eduardo Belda1, Sara Abalo-Morla2, Luís Cardona3, Elena Abella4, Lucas Belda1, Blanca Feliu-Tena1,5, Marta Pascual6, Carlos Carreras6, Jesús Tomás7

1: Institut per a la Investigació i Gestió de Zones Costaneres (IGIC), Universitat Politècnica de València, C/Paranimf n° 1, 46730, Gandia, València, Spain; 2: Instituto Español de Oceanografía, Centro Oceanografico de Vigo (COV-IEO), CSIC, Subida a Radio Faro, 50-52, 36390, Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain; 3: Departament de Biologia Evolutiva, Ecologia i Ciències Ambientals, Universitat de Barcelona (UB), Av. Diagonal 643, 08028, Barcelona, Spain; 4: BETA Tech Center, TECNIO Network, University of Vic-Central University of Catalonia ( UVic-UCC), C. de Roda 70, 08500, Vic, Spain.; 5: Instituto Español de Oceanografía (IEO-CSIC), C.O. Murcia, C/el Varadero 1, Lo Pagan, 30740 Murcia, Spain; 6: Departament de Genètica, Microbiologia i Estadística and IRBio, Universitat de Barcelona, Avinguda Diagonal, 643, 08028, Barcelona, Spain.; 7: Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, University of Valencia, Apdo. 22085, E-46071, Valencia, Spain



Collaborative conservation initiatives: Preliminary assessment of the green turtle (Chelonia mydas) nesting ecology in Chakar Hutan, Terengganu, Malaysia

Nur Isandra Shazlynn Shamsul Azmil1, Wan Zuriana Wan Sulaiman1, Muhammad Afiq Karim1, Audrey Symplicius1, Seh Ling Long1,2

1: Lang Tengah Turtle Watch, Malaysia; 2: TRAFFIC International Southeast Asia



Olive Ridley nesting monitoring in the Osa Peninsula; threats and conservation measures.

Alba Lopez Bobadilla, Laura Exley

COPROT, Comunidad Protectora de Tortugas de Osa, Costa Rica



How important is sea turtle nest site selection in the context of climate change?

Holly Jayne Stokes1, Nicole Esteban1, Graeme C Hays2

1: Swansea University, United Kingdom; 2: Deakin University, Australia



Effects of rising temperature on sea turtle nesting outcomes - How TREE Foundation maintains the temperature along the Andhra Pradesh coast, India.

Prabhakara Rao Marabathina, Supraja Dharini

TREE Foundation, India



Reproductive trends of loggerhead and green sea turtle populations over time: An analysis of a long-term nest monitoring dataset from Sanibel, Florida, USA

Savannah M Weber1, Andrew Glinsky2, Jack W Brzoza1, Charles LeBuff3, Kelly A Sloan1

1: Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation (Florida, USA); 2: Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research (Hawaii, USA); 3: Caretta Research Inc (Florida, USA)



A summary of twenty eight years of sea turtle nesting data on Topsail Island, North Carolina

Terry Meyer1, Jean F Beasley1, Kathryn A Zagzebski1, Matthew H Godfrey2

1: The Karen Beasley Sea Turtle Rescue & Rehabilitation Center, 302 Tortuga Lane, Surf City, NC 28445; 2: North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, 1701 Mail Service Center Raleigh, NC 27699-1700



17-year green sea turtle monitoring on Tetiaroa atoll, French Polynesia

Dr. Cécile Gaspar, Dr. Jade Gouin, Théo Guillaume, Romain Clervoy

TE MANA O TE MOANA, NGO, French Polynesia



Irresponsible tourism is a threat to the habitat of the green sea turtle on the northern coasts of the Sea of Oman Sea

Mahmood Sinaei1, Mehdi Bolouki2, Mohammad Talebi Matin2, Ashrafali Hosseini2, Mostafa Hasanian1, Farhad Salehzehi3, Mohammad Sadegh Saba2

1: Department of Biology, Marine Environment Research Center, Islamic Azad University, Chabahar Branch, Chabahar, Iran; 2: Department of Environment, Tehran, Iran; 3: Chabahar Industrial Free Zone, Sistan and Baloochistan, Chabahar, Iran



Last strongholds of Iran’s largest hawksbill rookery: mice invasion on the Nakhiloo Island, Persian Gulf

Majid Askari-Hesni1, Mostafa Moazeni2, Mohammad Amin Tollab2, Hossein Jafari2, Abdolrahman Moradzadeh2, Amirmozafar Hosseini3, Mahdi Iranmanesh1, Somaye Zangiabadi4, Abolfazl Akbari5, Pejman Khalili5, Amir Ehsan Stansti5, Mohsen Rezaie-Atagholipour6

1: Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, Kerman, Iran.; 2: Department of Environment, Bushehr, Iran; 3: Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Science, Khoramshahr Marine Science and Technology University, Khoramshahr, Khuzestan, Iran; 4: Department of Biology, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran; 5: Persian Gulf Mobin Energy Company, Asalouyeh, Bushehr, Iran; 6: Qeshm Environmental Conservation Institute (QECI), Qeshm Island, Hormozgan, Iran



The significance and challenges faced by the increasing number of nesting honu (Hawaiian Green Sea Turtles) on Oahu

Deborah Kay Herrera1, Sheldon Plentovich2, Kelly Goodale3, Joy Browning4

1: Malama i na honu, United States of America; 2: Pacific Islands Coastal Program; 3: Pacific Islands Fish and Wildlife Service Office; 4: Pacific Islands Fish and Wildlife Service Office



Unveiling a recently discovered loggerhead sea turtle nesting site in Greece producing a predominance of male hatchlings

Anna Lamaj, Galini Samlidou, ALan F. Rees, Dimitris Margaritoulis

ARCHELON, the Sea Turtle Protection Society of Greece



How sand grain size dictates sea turtle hatchlings’ destiny in the nest escaping?

Mohd Uzair Rusli, Lyvia Chong, David T. Booth, Nadhirah Syafiqah Suhaimi

Sea Turtle Research Unit (SEATRU), Institute of Oceanography and Environment, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia



Utilisation of the Spatial Monitoring and Reporting Tool to monitor nesting sea turtle activity and volunteer patrol effort at Cambodia’s only known nesting site

Chandara Tak, Matthew Glue, Tharamony Ngoun

Fauna & Flora, Cambodia



*The umbilical cord as a non-invasive sampling: genotype and applications

Gisela Marín-Capuz1, Elena Abella2, Marta Pascual1, Cinta Pegueroles1,3, Carlos Carreras1,3

1: Departament de Genètica, Microbiologia i Estadística and IRBio, Universitat de Barcelona, Avinguda Diagonal, 643, 08028, Barcelona, Spain; 2: BETA Technological Center, University of Vic - Central University of Catalonia, Carretera Roda 70, E-08500, Vic, Spain; 3: Should be considered senior authors



*Identifying geographic locations where sea turtle species are likely to inter-breed and hybridize

Sierra Nicole Hershberger1,2, Mary M Brandle1,2, Sibelle T Vilaça3, Matthew D Ramirez1,2

1: Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina 28403 USA; 2: Center for Marine Science, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina 28409 USA; 3: Instituto Technológico Vale, Belém, Pará, 66055-090, Brazil



*4-decades of loggerhead nesting trends and survey analyses at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune

Hailey Grossman1,2, Susan Piacenza1

1: Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences, Oregon State University; 2: Environmental Management Division, Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune NC



*Size matters: how sample size and molecular marker choice affect mixed stock analysis

Gustavo D. Stahelin1,2, Katherine L. Mansfield1

1: University of Central Florida, Department of Biology, Orlando, FL, USA; 2: Fundação Projeto Tamar, Salvador, BA, Brazil.



Where do they come from? A genomic baseline for individual assignments in the loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta)

Astrid Luna-Ortiz1, Anna Barbanti1, Adolfo Marco2, Silvia Giralt3, Daniela Freggi4, Cinta Pegueroles1, Alberto Abreu-Grobois5, Raúl Llera-Herrera5, Elisabeth Labastida-Estrada6, Salima Machkour M`Rabet7, Dimitris Margaroitoulis8, Oguz Turkozan9, Marta Pascual1,10, Carlos Carreras1,10

1: Departament de Genètica, Microbiologia i Estadística and IRBio, Universitat de Barcelona, Avinguda Diagonal, 643, 08028 Barcelona, Spain; 2: Department of Biodiversity Conservation, Estación Biológica de Doñana, CSIC, Americo Vespucio s/n, 41092 Seville, Spain; 3: Fundación para la Conservación y la Recuperación de Animales Marinos (CRAM), 08820 El Prat de Llobregat, Spain; 4: Lampedusa Sea Turtle Rescue Center, Punta Sottile, 92031 Lampedusa AG, Italy; 5: Unidad Académica Mazatlan, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Apartado Postal 811, Mazatlan, Sinaloa 82000 Mexico; 6: Colección Nacional de Helmintos. Departamento de Zoología. Instituto de Biología. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; 7: Laboratorio de Ecología Molecular y Conservación, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur Unidad Chetumal; 8: ARCHELON, the Sea Turtle Protection Society of Greece, Solomou 57, GR-10432 Athens, Greece; 9: Aydın Adnan Menderes University, Faculty of Arts and Science, Department of Biology, 09010 Aydın, Turkey; 10: Should be considered senior authors



New colonisers drive the increase of the emerging loggerhead turtle nesting in Western Mediterranean

Astrid Luna-Ortiz1,8, Gisela Marín-Capuz1,8, Elena Abella2, Jose Luis Crespo-Picazo3, Fernando Escribano4, Guillem Félix5, Silvia Giralt6, Jesús Tomás7, Marta Pascual1,9, Carlos Carreras1,9, Cinta Pegueroles1,9

1: Department of Genetics, Microbiology and Statistics and IrBio, University of Barcelona, Avinguda Diagonal 643, E-08028, Barcelona, Spain; 2: BETA Technological Center, University of Vic - Central University of Catalonia, Carretera Roda 70, E-08500, Vic, Spain; 3: Fundació Oceanogràfic de la Comunitat Valenciana, Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències, E-46013, València, Spain; 4: Centro de Recuperación de Fauna Silvestre "El Valle", Ctra. Subida a El Valle, 62, E-30150, La Alberca de las Torres, Murcia, Spain.; 5: Consorci de Recuperació de Fauna de les Illes Balears (COFIB) Carretera Palma- Sineu, Km 15,400, E-07142, Santa Eugènia, Balearic Islands, Spain; 6: Fundación para la Conservación y la Recuperación de Animales Marinos (CRAM), E-08820, El Prat de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain; 7: Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, University of Valencia, Apdo. 22085, E-46071, Valencia, Spain; 8: Should be considered first author; 9: Should be considered senior authors



Reimagining sea turtle conservation in India: insights from a long-term monitoring study

Chandana Pusapati1, Muralidharan Manoharakrishnan2, Nupur Kale3, Chetan Rao4, Alissa Barnes5, Vishrutha Rao1, Kartik Shanker1,6

1: Dakshin Foundation, Bangalore, India; 2: World Wide Fund for Nature-India; 3: Swansea University, Swansea, United Kingdom; 4: FLAME University, Pune, India; 5: Wildlife Conservation Society-India; 6: Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, Karnataka, India



Genetic stock structure of Hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) nesting populations in Fiji

Erin L. LaCasella1, Susanna Piovano2, Shritika S. Prakash2, Malakai Tuiono2, Ana Ciriyawa2, Peter H. Dutton1

1: Southwest Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries, United States of America; 2: SAGEONS, The University of the South Pacific, Fiji



Genetic stock identification of fisheries bycatch provides insights into differences in broad-scale distribution patterns of leatherbacks in the North and Southeast Pacific

Suzanne E Roden1, Erin L LaCasella1, Joanna Alfaro-Shigueto2,3, George H Balazs4, Nelly de Paz Campos5, Miguel Donoso6, Amy Frey1, T Todd Jones7, Jeffrey C Mangel2, Summer Martin7, Shawn Murakawa7, Patricia Zarate8, Peter H Dutton1

1: Southwest Fisheries Science Center, NOAA-Fisheries; 2: Asociacion ProDelphinus; 3: Universidad Cientifica del Sur; 4: Golden Honu Services of Oceania; 5: ACOREMA; 6: Pacifico Laud; 7: Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, NOAA-Fisheries; 8: Departamento de Oceanografía y Medio Ambiente, Instituto de Fomento Pesquero



Surviving the Northernmost waters: Genetic insights into green turtles' adaptation in Japan

Tomoko Hamabata

Graduate School of Information Sciences, Tohoku University, Japan



Developing a cost-effective molecular method of sex determination of Northern Atlantic juvenile sea turtles using gene expression

Maxine A. Montello1, Patricia Ceseretti2, Andrew M. Wier2

1: New York Marine Rescue Center, Riverhead, New York, USA; 2: Dyson College of Natural Science, Biology Department, Pace University, Pleasantville, New York, USA



Genetic characterization and diversity of an undescribed loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta) reproductive population and new insights on the genetic structure for the southwest Atlantic

Alberty Cleyton Gaspar Xavier1, Luana Alves Simões1, Sarah de Souza Alves Teodoro1, Sandra Ludwig1, Gabrielly Loretti Schultz1, Ana Carolina Barcelos Pereira Mariano1, Daniella Torres Almeida Pereira2, Tatiane Bittar Vieira2, Victor Patiri3, Gustave Gilles Lopez3, Romoaldo Sales Gaspar3, Sarah Maria Vargas1

1: Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Brazil; 2: Fundação Projeto Tamar.; 3: Braço Social Consultoria



Genetic composition and origin of undescribed leatherback turtles aggregations (Dermochelys coriacea) along the Brazilian coast

Gabrielly Loretti Schultz1, Werlanne Magalhães2, Sarah de Souza Alves Teodoro1, Ana Carolina Barcelos Pereira Mariano1, Alberty Cleyton Gaspar Xavier1, Alexsandro Santos3, Daniella Torres Almeida Pereira3, Tatiane Bittar Vieira3, Marta Cremer4, Camila Domit5, Sarah Maria Vargas1

1: Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Brazil; 2: Instituto Tartarugas do Delta; 3: Fundação Projeto TAMAR; 4: Universidade da Região de Joinville; 5: Universidade Federal do Paraná



Somatic growth rates of juvenile green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) foraging in the Fijian Archipelago

Garrett E Lemons1, Calandra N Tuner Tomaszewicz1, Shritika S Prakash2, Katy Miller3, Jeffrey A Seminoff1, Susanna Piovano2

1: NOAA, United States of America; 2: School of Agriculture, Geography, Environment, Oceans, and Natural Sciences, The University of the South Pacific, Suva, Fiji; 3: Vatuvara Private Islands, Suva, Fiji



Assessing breeding sex ratios and relatedness among male and female breeders in a hawksbill turtle rookery

Kathryn Levasseur1,2, Cooper Oljeski1, Dyani Harrison1, Sylvia Stewart-Bates1, Phoebe Fowler1, Seth Stapleton2,3, Joseph Quattro4

1: Davidson College, USA; 2: Jumby Bay Hawksbill Project, Long Island, Antigua; 3: University of Minnesota, USA; 4: University of South Carolina, USA



Genetic analysis of hawksbill sea turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) by mtDNA sequences in the Yucatan Peninsula

Irlanda Esmeralda Gallardo-Alanis1,2, Fátima Yedith Camacho-Sánchez1,3, Blanca Idalia González-Garza4, Cesar Ley-Quiñonez5, Alan A. Zavala-Norzagaray5, Luis Angel Tello-Sahagún5,6, Mitzi C. Núñez-Solano7, Israel Llamas-Gonzalez7, Caterine E. Hart8, A. Alonso Aguirre9, José Alberto Narváez-Zapata110, Miguel Angel Reyes Lopez1

1: Centro de Biotecnología Genómica, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Mexico; 2: George Mason University; 3: UAT-UAMRA; 4: Mar y Sierra Salvaje A.C; 5: Instituto Politécnico Nacional, CIIDIR Sinaloa; 6: Estación Biológica Majahuas; 7: Eco Mayto A. C; 8: Centro de Investigaciones oceanicas del mar de Cortés, Mazatlán, Sinaloa; 9: Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University; 10: Industrial Biotechnology Laboratory, Centro de Biotecnología Genómica, Instituto Politécnico Nacional



Updating haplotypes for Antigua & Barbuda and re-analyzing rookery structure in the Eastern Caribbean

Kathryn Levasseur1,2, Johana Monzon1, Dyani Harrison1, Cooper Oljeski1, Sylvia Stewart-Bates1, Seth Stapleton2,3

1: Davidson College, USA; 2: Jumby Bay Hawksbill Project, Long Island, Antigua; 3: University of Minnesota, USA



Evaluating the green turtle new colonisation of the Mediterranean through genomics and satellite telemetry

Gisela Marín-Capuz1, José Luís Crespo-Picazo2, Nathan J. Robinson2,3, Lucia Garrido4, Ana R. Patrício5,6, Simon Demetropoulos7, Dimitris Margaritoulis8, Jane Hardwick9, Imed Jbri10, Marta Pascual1, Cinta Pegueroles1,11, Carlos Carreras1,11

1: Departament de Genètica, Microbiologia i Estadística and IRBio, Universitat de Barcelona, Avinguda Diagonal, 643, 08028, Barcelona, Spain; 2: Fundación Oceanogràfic de la Comunitat Valenciana, Gran Vía Marqués del Turia 19, 46005 Valencia, Spain; 3: Institut de Ciències del Mar, Spanish National Research Council - Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Barcelona 08003, Spain; 4: Fundación para la Conservación y la Recuperación de Animales Marinos (CRAM), E-08820, El Prat de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain; 5: MARE – Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre / ARNET – Aquatic Research Network, Ispa – Instituto Universitário de Ciências Psicológicas, Sociais e da Vida, Lisboa, Portugal; 6: Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn, UK; 7: Cyprus Wildlife Society, P.O. Box 24281. Nicosia 1703, Cyprus; 8: ARCHELON, the Sea Turtle Protection Society of Greece, Solomou 57, GR-10432 Athens, Greece; 9: Department of Environment, PO Box 10202 Grand Cayman KY1-1002, Cayman Islands.; 10: BIOME Lab Sfax Faculty of Sciences, University of Sfax, Route Soukra 1171, Sfax, Tunisia; 11: Should be considered senior authors



The mystery of bimodal nesting seasons in marine turtles

Marc Girondot

Université Paris-Saclay, France



Implications from low remigration rates of nesting females in the North Pacific population of loggerhead turtles.

Yoshimasa Matsuzawa1,2, Takashi Ishihara1,3, Kojiro Mizuno4,5, Mitsuharu Kume5, Ryoko Masuyama5, Shizue Mizutani5

1: Sea Turtle Association of Japan; 2: Shikoku Aquarium; 3: AQUARIUM x ART átoa; 4: Amami Marine Life Research Association; 5: Turtle Crew



Where did they go? Alarming lack of juveniles raises concern at Tubbataha

Nicolas Pilcher1, Angelique Songco2, Rizza Araceli Salinas3, Maria Retchie Alaba2, Gerlie Gedoria2, Segundo Conales Jr2, Noel Bundal2, Jeffrey David2, Crisencio Caranay Jr.2, Rowell Alarcon2

1: Marine Research Foundation, Malaysia; 2: Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park, Philippines; 3: Biodiversity Management Bureau, Philippines



Shout-out to loggerheads in Brazil: Nesting trends from 1991 – 2019

Gustavo David Stahelin1, Paulo Barata1, Paulo Lara1, Nathalia Berchieri1, Alexsandro Santos1, João Carlos Alciati Thomé2, Cecília Baptistotte2, Daniella Torres de Almeida1, Daniel Nascimento3, Jaqueline Castilhos1, Bruno Giffoni1, Danielle Monteiro4,5, Maria Ângela Marcovaldi1

1: Fundação Projeto Tamar, Salvador, BA, Brazil.; 2: Centro TAMAR-ICMBio, Vitória, ES, Brazil.; 3: Reserva Particular do Patrimônio Natural – Fazenda Caruara, São João da Barra, RJ, Brazil.; 4: Laboratório de Estudos para a Pesca Responsável – Instituto de Oceanografia – Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Rio Grande, RS, Brazil.; 5: Núcleo de Educação e Monitoramento Ambiental – NEMA, Rio Grande, RS, Brazil.



Helminth Infection of the Loggerhead Sea Turtle Caretta caretta along the Tunisian coasts

Wiem Boussellaa1, Hamed Mallat2, Maroua Hrizi2, Imed Jribi2

1: SZN; Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn di Napoli, Italy; 2: Faculty of Sciences of Sfax



Skin lesion in aquaculture green sea turtle, Chelonia Mydas

Muhammad Nasyrul Adly Mohd Afandy, Faizah Aplop, Mohd Uzair Rusli

Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia



Clinical and radiographic evaluation of mortality leading cause in accidentally trawled sea turtles: Drowning or Gas embolism?

Delia Franchini1, Stefano Ciccarelli1, Carmela Valastro1, Francesco Caprio1, Davide Bellomo1, Daniela Freggi1, Pasquale Salvemini2, Antonio Di Bello1

1: Sea Turtle Clinic, Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Bari, Italy; 2: WWF Turtle Rescue Center, Molfetta Bari, Italy



A multidisciplinary approach on the health assessment of loggerhead turtles undergoing rehabilitation: supporting their role as sentinels of marine litter

Montserrat Sole1, Arnaud Legrand2, Edith Bigot-Corbel2, Maria El Rakwe M3, Enora Prado3, Gaelle Blanvillain4, Albert Martinez-Silvestre5, Jose Luis Crespo6, Lucia Garrido7, Claude Miaud8, Fabien Aubret9, Pauline Provin10, Arnaud Charlery-Adèle10, Jean-Christophe Auguet10

1: ICM-CSIC, Spain; 2: Nantes Université, France; 3: IFREMER, Brest, France; 4: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, USA; 5: CRARC, Spain; 6: Fundación Oceanogràfic, Spain; 7: CRAM, Spain; 8: UAR CNRS, France; 9: CEFE, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE-PSL University, IRD, Univ Paul Valéry, France; 10: MARBEC, Université de Montpellier, CNRS, Ifremer, IRD, France



Traumatic Fibromas in Lepidochelys olivacea during rehabilitation: case report

Denyielim Elias de Oliveira1, Ana Clara Rigoni1, Paolla di Cavallieri Rodrigues1, Clara Sardinha1, Daniela Nóbrega2, Renato Leite Leonardo3, Joana Ikeda1, Daphne Wrobel Goldberg4

1: Ambipar Response; 2: Laboratório Pat Animal; 3: Dr. Fish Soluções em Aquarismo e Veterinária Ltda; 4: Projeto Albatroz



Health and hematological evaluation of captive hawkbills sea turtle in a rehabilitation facility in Thailand

Sirawich Srisiri1,2, Komkiew Pinpimai3, Thanida Haetrakul1,2,3

1: Department of Veterinary Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary Science Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, 10330, Thailand; 2: Veterinary Medical Aquatic Animal Research Center of Excellence (VMARCE), Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, 10330, Thailand; 3: Aquatic Resource Research Institute, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, 10330, Thailand



Caring for long-term sea turtle patients: exploring the potential of Environmental Enrichment strategies through the experience of Lampedusa Rescue Center, Italy

Andrea Badaile, Daniela Freggi, Aethus Salvatore Tuccio

Lampedusa Sea Turtle Rescue Center, Italy



Surveying antibiotic resistance of gram-negative bacteria isolated from wild-caught green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) and loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) of Florida, U.S.A.

Christina Cortes, Isabella Donadio Pizzolato, Nada Maher, Sarah Milton

Florida Atlantic University, United States of America



Community livelihoods development as a sea turtle conservation tool in Sri Lanka

Thushan Kapurusinghe, Shyama Wijekulasuriya, Deshapriya Saman Rathnakumara, Vasantha Pahalawattaarachchi

Turtle Conservation Project, Sri Lanka



Incidental Discovery of Materials, Equipment, and Methods through the Words of a Carey Craftsman.

Gilberto Rafael Borges Guzmán1,2,3, Héctor Barrios-Garrido4,5,6, Pedro Vernet1,2

1: ProOcean; 2: Fundación Científica Los Roques, Venezuela; 3: Asociación Mexicana de Veterinarios de Tortugas; 4: King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia; 5: TropWATER, James Cook University. Australia; 6: GTTM-GV, Venezuela



*Teeny Tiny Neon Turtles: A reliable, accessible, and scalable minimally-invasive remote tracking method for post hatchling neonate sea turtles

Jenna Contuchio, Rita Mehta

University of California Santa Cruz, United States of America



Drone fight to FAIR dataset

Nick Mortimer1, Milica Stankovic2, Mathew A Vanderklif1, Chris Jacket1

1: CSIRO Environment, Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre, Crawley, WA, Australia, 6009; 2: Excellence Center for Biodiversity of Peninsular Thailand, Faculty of Science, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand 90112



The potential of passive acoustic monitoring to help inform conservation strategies of northwest Atlantic leatherback sea turtles (Dermochelys coriacea)

Derek M. Aoki1,2,7, Annie Page2, Justin R. Perrault1, Jeffrey R. Guertin3, Scott Benson4,8, Andrew DiMatteo5, Claudio Quesada-Rodriguez6, Aimee L. Hoover7, George L. Shillinger7,9

1: Loggerhead Marinelife Center, Juno Beach, Florida, USA; 2: Florida Atlantic University, Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, Fort Pierce, Florida, USA; 3: Inwater Research Group, Jensen Beach, Florida, USA; 4: Marine Mammal and Turtle Division, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Moss Landing, CA, USA; 5: CheloniData LLC, Berthoud, CO, USA; 6: Ecology Project International, Pacuare Reserve, Costa Rica; 7: Upwell Turtles, Monterey, California, USA; 8: Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, San Jose State University, Moss Landing, CA, USA; 9: MigraMar, Bodega Bay, California, USA



Comparing aerial and boat-based surveys to monitor offshore aggregations of olive ridleys in India

Muralidharan Manoharakrishnan1, Sadhwi Sindura Behera1, Sejal Worah1, Shashank Srinivasan2, Nandini Mehrotra2, Chandana Pusapati3, Vishrutha Rao3, Kartik Shanker3,4

1: World Wide Fund for Nature-India; 2: Technology for Wildlife Foundation, Goa, India; 3: Dakshin Foundation, Bangalore, Karnataka, India; 4: Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, Karnataka, India



Adopt, track, protect: leveraging digitalization for sustainable sea turtle conservation in malaysia

Faizah Aplop, Tuan Mustaqim Rosdan, Arizal Shamsil Rifin, Muhammad Nasyrul Afandy, Muhd Uzair Rusli

Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia



Nest domes: an innovative strategy to mitigate the impact of climate change in the sex determination of sea turtles

Zulema Alejandra Guevara Oviedo1, Sara Giraldo2, Sergio Tenjo2, Daniel Payan3

1: Rancho San Cristóbal CSL; 2: Banana Boat; 3: VML Colombia



Novel miniaturized satellite tags reveal diving behaviors of early-life stage leatherback turtles.

Tony Candela1,2,3, Jeanette Wyneken4, Peter Leijen5, Emily Turla4, Philippe Gaspar2, George L. Shillinger1

1: Upwell, Monterey, CA, USA; 2: Mercator Ocean International, Toulouse, France; 3: Aquarium La Rochelle, La Rochelle, France; 4: Department of Biological Sciences, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, USA; 5: Lotek Wireless, Inc., Havelock North, New-Zealand



Utilization of Artificial Intelligence (AI) to automate sea turtle identification in low water visibility in Uruguay, South Western Atlantic.

Rafael Rosa1,2,3, Natalia S. Teryda1,4, Gabriela M. Vélez-Rubio1,2,5

1: Karumbé NGO, Av. Rivera 3245, Montevideo, 11600, Uruguay; 2: Departamento MEDIA, Centro Universitario Regional del Este (CURE), Universidad de la República, Rocha, Uruguay.; 3: Instituto de Computación (INCO), Facultad de Ingeniería, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay; 4: School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Florida, USA.; 5: Sección Oceanografía y Ecología Marina, Instituto de Ecología y Ciencias Ambientales, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, 11400, Uruguay



Identification of sea turtle species using MALDI-TOF/MS

Rangsima Sujittosakul1, Sittiruk Roytrakul3, Siriwan Thaisakun3, Ekarit Duangmala4, Watchara Sakornwimon5, Kirsty Magson6, Patcharaporn Kaewmong7, Stephen Dunbar8, Thanida Haetrakul1,2

1: Department of Veterinary Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand; 2: Veterinary Medical Aquatic Animal Research Center of Excellence, Faculty of Veterinary Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand; 3: Functional Proteomics Technology Laboratory, National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, National Science and Technology Development Agency, Pathumthani 12120, Thailand; 4: Ao-Siam National Park, Prachuab Khiri Khan 77140, Thailand; 5: Marine and Coastal Resources Research Center (Central Gulf of Thailand), Chumphon 86000, Thailand; 6: New Heaven Reef Conservation Program, Surat Thani 84360, Thailand; 7: Phuket Marine Biological Center, Phuket 83000, Thailand; 8: Loma Linda University, California 92350, United State

 
9:45am
-
10:15am
Coffee Break
10:15am
-
12:00pm
Keynote Address
Location: Napalai A
12:00pm
-
1:15pm
Lunch (included)
1:30pm
-
3:00pm
In-water Biology (Behaviour, Ecology, Migration, Telemetry, and Foraging) #1
Location: Napalai A
Chair: Summer L. Martin
Chair: Matthew David Ramirez
Chair: Gabriela Manuela Velez-Rubio
Chair: Michael G White
 
1:30pm - 1:43pm

Voluntary feeding of gravid green turtles during the reproductive period: Implications for breeding strategy of marine reptilian herbivores

Junichi Okuyama1,2, Narumi Kishida3, Hideaki Nishizawa1, Yuka Obe1, Takuro Mogi3, Takuya Koizumi1, Takuji Noda1, Tohya Yasuda1, Yuuki Kawabata1, Takashi Yokota1, Kotaro Ichikawa1, Yasushi Mitsunaga3, Nobuaki Arai1

1: Graduate school of Informatics, Kyoto University, Japan; 2: Present Address: Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency; 3: Graduate school of Agriculture, Kindai University, Japan



1:43pm - 1:56pm

Identifying the foraging grounds of new loggerhead turtle nesters in the Western Mediterranean

Luis Cardona1, Sara Abalo-Morla2, Alessandra Cani1, Blanca Feliu-Tena2, Nuria Izaguirre1, Jesús Tomás3, Eduardo Jorge Belda2

1: University of Barcelona, Spain; 2: Institut d’Investigació per a la Gestió de Zones Costaneres (IGIC), Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain; 3: Cavanilles Institute of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, University of Valencia, Spain



1:56pm - 2:09pm

Foraging behavior of leatherback sea turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) off Massachusetts, USA: insights from acceleration data loggers

Kara L. Dodge1, Connor F. White2, Scott Landry3, Bob Lynch3, Nicholas M. Whitney1

1: Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life, New England Aquarium, Boston, MA, USA; 2: Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA; 3: Center for Coastal Studies, Provincetown, MA, USA



2:09pm - 2:22pm

A fine-scale habitat-based density model for leatherback turtles foraging in nearshore waters off central California, USA.

Scott R. Benson1,2, Karin A. Forney1,2

1: Marine Mammal and Turtle Division, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 7544 Sandholdt Rd, Moss Landing, CA, USA; 2: Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, San Jose State University, 7544 Sandholdt Rd, Moss Landing, CA, USA



2:22pm - 2:35pm

Foraging green turtles (Chelonia mydas) in southern California: nutrient flow and habitat structure characterized by essential amino acid 13C fingerprinting

Garrett E Lemons1, Alexi C Besser2, Seth D Newsome2, Jeffrey A Seminoff1

1: NOAA, United States of America; 2: University of New Mexico, Department of Biology



2:35pm - 2:48pm

A deeper dive into the life history and habitat use patterns of green sea turtles in Southern California, USA

Cali N. Turner Tomaszewicz, Erin L. LaCasella, Garrett Lemons, Robin A. LeRoux, Andrew Maurer, Kimberly LeRoy, Jeffrey A. Seminoff

NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center, United States of America



2:48pm - 3:01pm

Detecting residency and habitat fidelity of green turtles in Taiwan

Chia-Ling Fong1,2,3,4, Huai Su4,6, Daphne Z. Hoh2,4,5, Chia-Chen Tsai4, Shih Liu4, Kelly W. H. Tseng4, Felipe M. G. Mattos1,2,3, Melissa Liu4, Ju-Hsiung Wu7, Aziz J. Mulla7, Nozawa Yoko8, Benny K. K. Chan1,2,3

1: Biodiversity Program, Taiwan International Graduate Program, Academia Sinica and National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan; 2: Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan; 3: Department of Life Science, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan; 4: TurtleSpot Taiwan, Pingtung, Taiwan; 5: Taiwan Biodiversity Information Facility, Taipei, Taiwan; 6: Islander divers, Pingtung, Taiwan; 7: National Taiwan University, Institute of Oceanography, Taipei, Taiwan; 8: University of the Ryukyus, Tropical Biosphere Research Center

Anatomy, Physiology and Health #1
Location: Napalai B
Chair: Sarah Milton
Chair: David William Owens
Chair: Justin Randall Perrault
Chair: Roldan Valverde
Chair: Jeanette Wyneken
 
1:30pm - 1:43pm

*Hormone levels assessment for sex classification and sexual maturity in green turtle (Chelonia mydas) from the Coast of Quintana Roo, México

Alma Guadalupe Vázquez Gómez1, Victor Manuel Gómez Muñoz2, Horacio Merchant Larios1, María del Carmen Rodríguez Vallarte3, Javier Flavio Vigueras Gómez3, Vanessa Labrada Martagón3

1: UNAM, Mexico; 2: CICIMAR- IPN La Paz, Mexico; 3: UASLP, Mexico



1:43pm - 1:56pm

*The Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) as a sex identification biomarker: Revisited

Gabriella Carvajal1, Jeanette Wyneken1, Itzel Sifuentes-Romero2

1: Florida Atlantic University, Florida, USA; 2: Iowa State University, Iowa, USA



1:56pm - 2:09pm

*Comparing heavy metal concentrations of loggerhead turtles and their prey along the US East Coast

YiWynn Chan1, Samir H. Patel2, Nathan J. Robinson3, Karen Dourdeville4, Robert Prescott4, Frank V. Paladino1,5

1: Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA; 2: Coonamessett Farm Foundation, Inc., East Falmouth, Massachusetts, USA; 3: Institut de Ciències del Mar, Spanish National Research Council - Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Barcelona, Spain; 4: Mass Audubon Society Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary, Massachusetts, USA; 5: The Leatherback Trust, Playa Grande, Costa Rica



2:09pm - 2:22pm

*Disentangling the impacts of contaminants on green sea turtle physiology

Caitlin Elizabeth Smith1, Jason van de Merwe2, Kimberly Finlayson2, Arthur Barraza2, Erina Young3, Ben Gilby1, Kathy Townsend1

1: The University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; 2: Griffith University, Australia; 3: EnviroVet Consultancy



2:22pm - 2:35pm

*Biomarkers of foraging and reproduction in nesting female Hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) in Bocas del Toro, Panama

Joslyn Blessing Kent1, Roldán A Valverde1,2, Raul García Varela2

1: Southeastern Louisiana University, United States of America; 2: Sea Turtle Conservancy



2:35pm - 2:48pm

*Biomarkers of reproductive output in free-ranging Hawksbill Sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) in Panama

Kari Renee Dawson

Southeastern Louisiana University, United States of America



2:48pm - 3:01pm

*Provisioning of vitellogenic follicles continues after green turtles arrive at the nesting beach in Tortuguero, Costa Rica.

Renato Saragoça Bruno, Alan B. Bolten, Karen A. Bjorndal

Archie Carr Center for Sea Turtle Research & Department of Biology, University of Florida

Conservation, Management and Policy #1
Location: Napalai C
Chair: Heidrun Frisch-Nwakanma
Chair: Stacy Hargrove
Chair: Michael Joseph Liles
Chair: Mario Jorge Mota
Chair: Aliki Panagopoulou
 
1:30pm - 1:43pm

Towards effective restoration of marine turtles in Jordan’s Aqaba coast line

Abeer Hisham Bilbeisi

Jordan Society for the Conservation of Turtles & Tortoises, Jordan, Hashemite Kingdom of



1:43pm - 1:56pm

*Carbon financing contributing to sea turtle conservation in Sri Lanka

Thushan Kapurusinghe, Mithma De Silva, Manuri Pankaja Kapurusinghe, Saman Rathnakumara, Kavindu Maduhansa

Turtle Conservation Project (TCP) - Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka



1:56pm - 2:09pm

*Overcoming barriers to knowledge: A multi-lingual systematic review of movement and migratory connectivity of green sea turtles around Southeast Asia

Harris Wei Khang Heng1,2, Kristine Camille V. Buenafe1,2,3, The Cuong Chu4, Rose Ellis5, Chia-Ling Fong6,7, Daphne Z. Ho7,8, Sekar M.C. Herandarudewi9, Connie Ka-Yan Ng10,11, Janmanee Panyawai12, Nguyen Trong Duc13, Daniel C. Dunn1,2

1: School of the Environment, The University of Queensland, Australia; 2: Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, The University of Queensland, Australia; 3: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Environment, Queensland Biosciences Precinct (QBP), Queensland, Australia; 4: The International Union for Conservation of Nature - Vietnam; 5: Khmer Ocean Life, Cambodia; 6: Biodiversity Research Centre, Academia Sinica, Taiwan; 7: TurtleSpot Taiwan; 8: Taiwan Biodiversity Information Facility, Biodiversity Research Centre, Academia Sinica, Taiwan; 9: Research Center for Oceanography, Badan Riset dan Inovasi Nasional (BRIN), Indonesia; 10: Department of Chemistry and State Key Laboratory of Marine Pollution, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, People’s Republic of China; 11: Golden Honu Services of Oceania, Hawaii, U.S.A.; 12: Seaweed and Seagrass Research Unit, Prince of Songkhla University, Thailand; 13: Center for Biodiversity Conservation and Endangered Species, Thu Duc City, Ho Chi Minh City, VietNam



2:09pm - 2:22pm

*A first global network model to describe known green sea turtle migratory connectivity

Jaime Restrepo1,2, Dina Nisthar1,2, Wei-Khang Heng1,2, Lily K. Bentley1,2, Anthony J. Richardson1,2,3, Daniel C. Dunn1,2

1: The University of Queensland, Australia; 2: Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science; 3: CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Brisbane, QLD, Australia



2:22pm - 2:35pm

*Marine turtle management areas: A fine-resolution spatial solution beneath Southeast Asian Regional Management Units

Rushan Bin Abdul Rahman1,2, Mark Hamann1, Juanita Joseph3, Putu Liza Mustika1, Nicolas Pilcher4, Windia Adnyana5, Jaya Ratha6, Thuy Nguyen Thi Dieu7

1: James Cook University, Townsville; 2: Conservation International - Singapore; 3: Universiti Malaysia Sabah; 4: Marine Research Foundation; 5: Universitas Udayana; 6: Thrive Conservation; 7: WWF - Vietnam



2:35pm - 2:48pm

*Under threat: Previously undocumented hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata) nesting on the west end of St. Croix, U.S.V.I.

Natalie K. Monnier1, Sabrina C. Sorace1, Donna Boles2, Joshua Calcano2, Makayla Kelso2, Claudia D. Lombard3, Lawrence Wood4, Sean Kelly5, Paul Jobsis1, Kelly R. Stewart2

1: University of the Virgin Islands, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands; 2: The Ocean Foundation, Washington, D.C. U.S.A.; 3: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands; 4: National Save the Sea Turtle Foundation, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida U.S.A.; 5: Division of Fish and Wildlife, Government of the Virgin Islands, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands



2:48pm - 3:01pm

Minimum Cost Estimate to Protect 80% — 100% of Western Pacific Leatherback Nests at the Jeen Womom Coastal Park in the Bird's Head Region of Papua, Indonesia

Fitryanti Pakiding1,2, Deasy Lontoh2, Meity Mongdong3, Manjula Tiwari4

1: Department of Agricultural Technology, Universitas Papua, Manokwari, Papua Barat 98314, Indonesia; 2: Science for Conservation Program, Research and Community Service Institute of Universitas Papua, Manokwari, Papua Barat 98314, Indonesia; 3: Konservasi Indonesia, Jakarta Selatan 12510, Indonesia; 4: Ocean Ecology Network, Research Affiliate of NOAA—Southwest Fisheries Science Center, La Jolla, California 92037, USA

3:00pm
-
3:30pm
Coffee Break
3:30pm
-
4:30pm
In-water Biology (Behaviour, Ecology, Migration, Telemetry, and Foraging) #2
Location: Napalai A
Chair: Summer L. Martin
Chair: Matthew David Ramirez
Chair: Gabriela Manuela Velez-Rubio
Chair: Michael G White
 
3:30pm - 3:43pm

Inter-nesting area use, migratory routes, and foraging grounds for hawksbill turtle

Chelsea E. Clyde-Brockway1,2, Daniel R. Evans3, Lindsey Eggers4, Quintin D. Bergman2, Luis G. Fonseca5, Frank V. Paladino2, Stephen G. Dunbar6,7,8

1: The Leatherback Trust, USA; 2: Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA; 3: Sea Turtle Conservancy, USA; 4: Seattle Aquarium, Seattle, WA, USA; 5: Biocenosis Marina, Costa Rica; 6: Protective Turtle Ecology Center for Training, Outreach, and Research, Inc. (ProTECTOR, Inc.) USA; 7: Marine Research Group, Loma Linda University, USA; 8: Protective Turtle Ecology Center for Training, Outreach, and Research, Inc. (ProTECTOR - Honduras.)



3:43pm - 3:56pm

Using satellite telemetry to identify migration routes and foraging grounds of olive ridley sea turtles (lepidochelys olivcea) from the west philippines sea, philippines

Ale Ponzo1, Andrew Troy Glinsky1, Sharah Marie Barredo1, Ariana Agustines1, Titus Canete1, Jessica Labaja1, Ronnie del Rosario2, Alexander R Gaos3, T. Todd Jones3, Rene Manibale2, Curt Ivan Mariano1, Summer L Martin3, Sally Snow1, John Wang3

1: Large Marine Vertebrates Research Institute Philippines Inc., Philippines; 2: Alimanguan Saguip Pawikan, Philippines; 3: NOAA Fisheries - Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, HI, USA



3:56pm - 4:09pm

Dispersal corridors of neonate sea turtles from dominant rookeries in the Western Indian Ocean

Diane Le Gouvello1, Sonia Heye2,3, Linda Harris1, Julien Temple-Boyer4, Philippe Gaspar4, Michael Hart-Davis5, Cristina Louro1, Ronel Nel1

1: Institute for Coastal and Marine Research, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa; 2: Nansen-Tutu Centre for Marine Environmental Research, Department of Oceanography, University of Cape Town, South Africa; 3: Deltares, Delft, Netherlands; 4: Mercator Ocean International, 2 Av. de l Aérodrome de Montaudran, Toulouse, France; 5: Deutsches Geodätisches Forschungsinstitut, Technische Universitat Munchen, Munich, Germany



4:09pm - 4:22pm

Testing the Thermal Corridor Hypothesis: Does El Nino warming of the NE Pacific allow Japanese Loggerheads to go to Mexico?

Larry B Crowder1, Dana K Briscoe1, George H Balazs2, Jeffery J Polovina3, Jeffrey A Seminoff4, Alberto Abreu-Grobois5, Masanori Kurita6, Masanori Mori6, Denise M Parker2, Marc R Rice7, Tomomi Saito8, Bianca S Santos1, Calandra N Turner-Tomaszewicz4, Noah Yamaguchi8

1: Stanford University, CA, USA; 2: Golden Honu Services of Oceania, Honolulu, HI and Newport, OR, USA; 3: University of Hawaii-Manoa, Honolulu HI, USA; 4: NOAA-SWFSC, LaJolla, CA, USA; 5: Unidad Academica Mazatlan, UNAM, Mazatlan, Sinaloa, MX; 6: Port of Nagoya Public Aquarium, Nagoya, JP; 7: Hawaii Preparatory Academy, Kamuela, HI, USA; 8: Kochi University, Kochi, JP



4:22pm - 4:35pm

Tracking post-release movement patterns of New York's rehabilitated sea turtles provides insights into their utilization of New York waters

Maxine A. Montello1,3, Wendy J. McFarlane2, Joseph D. Warren3

1: New York Marine Rescue Center, Riverhead, NY, USA; 2: Division of Natural Sciences, Mathematics & Computing, Manhattanville College, Purchase, NY, USA; 3: School for Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, Southampton, NY, USA

Anatomy, Physiology and Health #2
Location: Napalai B
Chair: Sarah Milton
Chair: David William Owens
Chair: Justin Randall Perrault
Chair: Roldan Valverde
Chair: Jeanette Wyneken
 
3:30pm - 3:43pm

*Assessing genotoxicity in Green Turtle cells using fluorescent microscopy and automated image analysis

Matt Johnson, Kimberly Finlayson, Todd Shelper, Jason van de Merwe, Frederic Leusch

Griffith university, Australia



3:43pm - 3:56pm

*Exposure to hypoxia fine-tunes mitochondrial function in primary dermal fibroblasts derived from loggerhead sea turtles

B. Gabriela Arango1, David C. Ensminger2, Celine Godard-Codding3, José Pablo Vázquez-Medina1

1: Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, United States of America; 2: Department of Biological Sciences, San José State University, United States of America; 3: Department of Environmental Toxicology, Texas Tech University, United States of America



3:56pm - 4:09pm

*First health assessments of juvenile hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) in the Maldives: clinical blood analytes, physical examinations, ultrasonic studies and gut microbiome characterization

Isha Afeef1, Enas Mohamed Riyaz2, Ibrahim Inaan1, Ahmed Leevan2, Afrah Abdul Sathaar1, Ali Shareef3, Aishath Shaiha2, Stephanie Köhnk4, Mariana Fragoso4, Tristan Neto4, Claire Petros5, Martin Stelfox4, Maximilian M.R. Polyak4,5

1: Olive Ridley Project Maldives, H. Kaneerumaage, Dhonhuraa Goalhi, Malé, 20037, Republic of Maldives; 2: Environmental Protection Agency, Handhuvaree Hingun, Malé, Republic of Maldives; 3: Happy Side, K. Maafushi, 08090, Republic of Maldives; 4: Olive Ridley Project, 91 Padiham Road, Sadben, Clitheroe, Lancashire, BB7 9EX UK; 5: Sea Turtle Rescue Alliance, 10 Unity Street, Bristol UK



4:09pm - 4:22pm

*Impacts of rising incubation temperatures on leatherback neonates as measured by key blood values and skin microbiota data.

Samantha G Kuschke1,2,3,4,5, Jeanette Wyneken5, Anna Beth Coleman2, Debra L Miller1,2,3

1: Department of Biomedical and Diagnostic Services, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA; 2: Center for Wildlife Health, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA; 3: One Health Initiative, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA; 4: Department of Biological Sciences, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, USA; 5: Upwell, Monterey, California, USA



4:22pm - 4:35pm

Assessing differences in chemical risk in foraging green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) using analytical and in vitro techniques

Kimberly Finlayson, Nicole Rowberry, Dylan White-Kiely, Jason van de Merwe

Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Australia

Population Biology and Monitoring #1
Location: Napalai C
Chair: Tomoko Hamabata
Chair: Hielim KIM
Chair: Robin LeRoux
Chair: Erin McMichael
Chair: Claudio Quesada-Rodríguez
Chair: Ryan Welsh
 
3:30pm - 3:43pm

*Environmental indicators predicting loggerhead sea turtle occurrence in southern california during El Niño conditions

Aileen Lavelle

Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University



3:43pm - 3:56pm

*A new framework for survival estimation of sea turtles

Naoto Inoue1, Takashi Ishihara2,3

1: Kobe University; 2: AQUARIUM×ART atoa; 3: Sea Turtle Association of Japan



3:56pm - 4:09pm

*Population genetics of foraging green (Chelonia mydas) and foraging and nesting hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) in Grenada, West Indies.

Naomi Westlake1, Kate Charles2, Brian Shamblin3, Jonnel Edwards4, Kenrith Carter2, Martin Attrill1, David Marancik4, Clare Embling1

1: University of Plymouth, UK; 2: Ocean Spirits Inc., Grenada; 3: University of Georgia, USA; 4: St. George's University, Grenada



4:09pm - 4:22pm

*Uncrewed Aerial Systems as tools for green turtle population assessment in coastal marine protected areas in Uruguay

Natalia S. Teryda1,2, Gabriela M. Velez-Rubio2,3, Laura Prosdocimi4, Brian Jeffery5, Raymond R. Carthy6

1: School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Florida, USA.; 2: Karumbe NGO, Montevideo, Uruguay; 3: Sección de Oceanografía y Ecología Marina, IECA, Faculta de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Uruguay; 4: Laboratorio de Ecología, Comportamiento y Mamíferos Marinos (LECyMM), Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales (MACN-CONICET), Argentina; 5: Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, USA; 6: U.S. Geological Survey, Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA



4:22pm - 4:35pm

*Prevalence of male-producing nesting sites for endangered sea turtles in the Asia-Pacific region and globally

Melissa Staines1, Hayley Versace2, Jacques-Olivier Laloë3, Christine Madden Hof4,5, Caitlin Smith4,6, Elouise Haskin4, Anissa Lawrence7, Ian Tibbetts1, David Booth1, Nicholas Pilcher8, Graeme Hays3

1: The University of Queensland, Australia; 2: Conflict Islands Conservation Initiative, Papua New Guinea; 3: Deakin University, Australia; 4: World Wide Fund for Nature - Australia; 5: World Wide Fund for Nature - Global; 6: University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; 7: TierraMar, Australia; 8: Marine Research Foundation, Sabah Malaysia

4:30pm
-
5:30pm
Meet the Authors Poster Session 1
Location: Napalai D & E
5:30pm
-
10:30pm
Board of Directors Meeting
Location: Dusit 2
6:00pm
-
7:30pm
Speed Chatting with the Experts
Location: Napalai C

See here for further information

6:00pm
-
8:00pm
Marine Turtle Specialist Group (MTSG) Meeting
Location: Dusit 3
8:00pm
-
11:00pm
Video Night
Location: Napalai C

See here for further information


 
Contact and Legal Notice · Contact Address:
Privacy Statement · Conference: ISTS42
Conference Software: ConfTool Pro 2.8.105+TC+CC
© 2001–2025 by Dr. H. Weinreich, Hamburg, Germany