Long-distance migrations by the hawksbill turtle, Eretmochelys imbricata, from north-eastern Australia
Jeffrey D. Miller, Kirstin A. Dobbs, Colin J. Limpus, Neil Mattocks and André M. Landry Jr
Wildlife Research 25(1) 89 - 95
Abstract
Tag recoveries from four adult female hawksbill turtles,
Eretmochelys imbricata, tagged on the Great Barrier
Reef, Australia, are reported. Hawksbill turtles on breeding migrations move
between Australia and neighbouring countries including Vanuatu, Solomon
Islands, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia. Migratory distances between foraging
areas and nesting beaches ranged from 368 to 2425 km. A review of data from
tag recoveries, genetic analysis and satellite telemetry indicates that adult
female hawksbill turtles often exhibit migratory behaviour parallelling that
of other marine turtle species. This study refutes the myth that hawksbill
turtles remain resident at reefs associated with their nesting beaches.
Full text doi:10.1071/WR96086
© CSIRO 1998





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