Register      Login
Wildlife Research Wildlife Research Society
Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Impact on predation of sea turtle nests when predator control was removed midway through the nesting season

Richard M. Engeman A F , R. Erik Martin B , Henry T. Smith C , John Woolard D , Carrie K. Crady B , Bernice Constantin D , Margo Stahl E and N. Paige Groninger A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A National Wildlife Research Center, 4101 LaPorte Avenue, Fort Collins, CO 80521-2154, USA.

B Ecological Associates, Inc., PO Box 405, Jensen Beach, FL 34958, USA.

C Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Florida Park Service, 13798 S.E. Federal Highway, Hobe Sound, FL 33455, USA.

D USDA/APHIS/Wildlife Services, 2820 East University Avenue, Gainesville, FL 32641, USA.

E Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge, 13640 S.E. Federal Highway, Hobe Sound, FL 33455, USA.

F Corresponding author. Email: richard.m.engeman@aphis.usda.gov

Wildlife Research 33(3) 187-192 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR05049
Submitted: 12 May 2005  Accepted: 17 March 2006   Published: 31 May 2006

Abstract

The beach at Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge (HSNWR) is a high-density nesting beach serving three species of threatened and endangered sea turtles. Historically, up to 95% of turtle nests at HSNWR were lost to predation by raccoons and armadillos. Consequently, predator control was identified as the most important conservation tool at HSNWR, and predator control optimised by predator monitoring led to highly successful results whereby predation had been reduced to low levels (7–13.5% of monitored nests) in 2002 and 2003. In 2004, funding shortfalls caused predator control to be curtailed with ~1.5–2 months remaining in the nesting/hatching season. We analysed the resulting effects on turtle nest predation levels compared with the results from 2002 and 2003. The predation rate in 2004 compared favourably with that of 2002 and 2003 until the end of June, after which control was curtailed. Thereafter, predation rapidly accelerated, with the 2004 predation rate increasing to 1.5–3 times the rates from 2002 and 2003 by the end of August. The discrepancy in all likelihood would have grown further, except Hurricane Frances destroyed all remaining nests with 1.5–2 months left in the nesting/hatching season. Product-limit survival analyses demonstrated substantial differences in turtle nest survival between 2004 versus 2002 and 2003, but not between 2002 and 2003. When analysed as cohorts based on month of nest deposition, no differences were found among 2002, 2003, 2004 for nests deposited in May. These nests received full protection from predation in each of the three years. However, the survival analyses for nests deposited in June, and those deposited in July showed inferior survival for 2004 when predator control was removed for the last half of nesting/hatching.


References

American Veterinary Medical Association (2001). 2000 report of the AVMA panel on euthanasia. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 218, 669–696.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Bain R. E., Jewell S. D., Schwagerl J., and Neely B. S.Jr (1997). Sea turtle nesting and reproductive success at the Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge (Florida), 1972–1995. Report to US Fish and Wildlife Service, ARM Loxahatchee NWR.

Dickman, C. R. , and Doncaster, C. P. (1987). The ecology of small mammals in urban habitats. I. Populations in a patchy environments. Journal of Animal Ecology 56, 629–640.
Ecological Associates. (2004). Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge, Jupiter Island Florida. Results of 2003 Sea Turtle Monitoring. Report to US Fish and Wildlife Service, ARM Loxahatchee NWR.

Engeman, R. M. (2005). A methodological and analytical paradigm for indexing animal populations applicable to many species and observation methods. Wildlife Research 32, 203–210.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Ehrhart L. M., and Witherington B. E. (1986). Human and natural causes of marine turtle nest and hatchling mortality and their relationship to hatchling production on an important Florida nesting beach. Report to Florida Game and Fresh Water Commission, Tallahassee, FL.

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (2002). Sea Turtle Conservation Guidelines. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Tallahassee, FL.

Garmestani, A. S. , and Percival, H. F. (2005). Raccoon removal reduces sea turtle nest predation in the Ten Thousand Islands of Florida. Southeastern Naturalist 4, 469–472.
IUCN (2004). ‘2003 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.’ www.redlist.org.

Kalbfleish J. D., and Prentice R. L. (1980). ‘The Statistical Analysis of Failure Time Data.’ (John Wiley and Sons: New York.)

Kaplan, E. L. , and Meier, P. (1958). Nonparametric estimation from incomplete observations. Journal of the American Statistical Association 53, 457–481.
Meylan A., Schroeder B., and Mosier A. (1995). ‘Sea Turtle Nesting Activity in the State of Florida 1979–1992.’ Florida Marine Research Publication No. 52. (Florida Marine Research Institute: St Petersburg, FL.)

Mroziak, M. L. , Salmon, M. , and Rusenko, K. (2000). Do wire cages protect sea turtles from foot traffic and nest predators? Chelonian Conservation and Biology 3, 693–698.
SAS Institute (2004). ‘SAS/STAT User’s Guide. Vol. 3.’ (SAS Institute: Carey, NC.)

Schmitz D. C., and Brown T. C. (1994). An assessment of invasive non-indigenous species in Florida’s public lands. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Tallahassee, FL.

Smith, H. T. , and Engeman, R. M. (2002). An extraordinary raccoon density at an urban park in Florida. Canadian Field Naturalist 116, 636–639.
Stancyk S. E. (1982). Non-human predators of sea turtles and their control. In ‘Biology and Conservation of Sea Turtles’. (Ed. K. A. Bjorndal.) pp. 139–152. (Smithsonian Institution Press: Washington, DC.)

US Congress (1993). ‘Harmful Non-indigenous Species in the United States.’ (Office of Technology Assessment, OTA-F-565, Government Printing Office: Washington, DC.)

US Department of Agriculture/Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, US Department of Agriculture/Forest Service and Department of Interior/Bureau of Land Management. (1997). Animal Damage Control Program Final Environmental Impact Statement (Revised). USDA/Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Washington, DC.

US Fish and Wildlife Service (1994). Endangered and threatened wildlife and plants. Federal Register 50, 17.11–17.12.
US Fish and Wildlife Service (2000). Environmental assessment for the management of predation losses to sea turtle nests at the Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge, Martin County, Florida. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Hobe Sound, FL.

US Fish and Wildlife Service, National Marine Fisheries Service (1991). Recovery plan for US population of loggerhead turtle. National Marine Fisheries Service: Washington, DC.

Williams-Walls, N. J. , O’Hara, J. , Gallagher, R. M. , Worth, D. F. , Peery, B. D. , and Wilcox, J. R. (1983). Spatial and temporal trends of sea turtle nesting on Hutchinson Island, Florida, 1971–1979. Bulletin of Marine Science 33, 55–66.


Woolard, J. , Engeman, R. M. , Smith, H. T. , and Griner, J. (2004). Cheloniidae (marine turtle) nest predation. SSAR Herpetological Review 35, 379–380.