Browsing by Author "Dellinger, Thomas"
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- Blood biochemistry reference values for wild juvenile loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) from Madeira archipelagoPublication . Delgado, Cláudia; Valente, Ana; Quaresma, Isabel; Costa, Margarida; Dellinger, ThomasStandard biochemical parameters were determined in wild juvenile loggerhead sea turtles Caretta caretta living offshore Madeira Island, northeast Atlantic. We analyzed the influence of age, sex, sea surface temperature, and body condition index on biochemical parameters including uric acid, total bilirubin, total cholesterol, creatinine kinase (CK), glucose, total protein, urea nitrogen, lactate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotranspherase (AST), gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT), albumin, alkaline phosphatase (ALP), sodium (NA), potassium (K), chloride, calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium. Significant positive correlations were found between turtle body size and total cholesterol, total protein, and albumin. Total protein and the enzymes AST and CK were lower than reported levels in adults. Calcium levels were lower than those reported in adult or captive turtles, but similar to wild juveniles from Australian waters, and were interpreted as normal for this age category. These data may be useful to evaluate the health status of stranded or injured animals and to improve veterinary care at rehabilitation centers.
- Compensatory growth in oceanic loggerhead sea turtles: response to a stochastic environmentPublication . Bjorndal, Karen A.; Bolten, Alan B.; Dellinger, Thomas; Delgado, Cláudia; Martins, Helen R.Compensatory growth (CG, accelerated growth that may occur when an organism that has grown at a reduced rate as a result of suboptimal environmental conditions is exposed to better conditions) is considered an adaptation to variable en vironments. Although documented thoroughly under captive conditions, CG has rarely been studied in wild populations. In their first years of life, oceanic-stage loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) have relatively little control over their geographic position or movements and thus have an extremely stochastic lifestyle with great variation in food availability and temperature. This environmental variation results in variable growth rates. We evaluate somatic growth functions of oceanic-stage loggerheads from the eastern Atlantic based on skeletochronology that allowed us to assign age and cohort to each individual. We demonstrate CG in these turtles based on three different analytical approaches: changes in coefficients of variation in size-at-age, generalized additive model regression analyses of somatic growth, and linear regression of age-specific growth rates. As a result of CG, variation in size-at-age in these juvenile loggerheads is substantially reduced. Thus, size is a better predictor of age than expected based on variation in growth rates. CG decreases with age, apparently as loggerheads gain greater control over their movements. In addition, we have evaluated for the first time in wild sea turtles the time-dependent nature of somatic growth by distinguishing among age, year, and cohort effects using a mixed longitudinal sampling design with assigned-age individuals. Age and year had significant effects on growth rates, but there was no significant cohort effect. Our results address critical gaps in knowledge of the demog raphy of this endangered species.
- Considerations on the biology of Plesionika narval (Fabricius, 1787) in the Northeastern AtlanticPublication . Sousa, Ricardo; Henriques, Paulo; Biscoito, Manuel; Pinto, Ana Rita; Delgado, João; Dellinger, Thomas; Pinho, Mário RuiLife history traits of Plesionika narval were studied in the Northeastern Atlantic, Madeira archipelago including growth, age, sexual maturity, recruitment pattern and mortality. A total of 28,262 specimens were sampled over a period of 8 years comprising two time series from 1991 to 1995 and 2004 to 2008. The relative growth pattern showed a negative allometric nature of growth for combined sexes, males, females, non ovigerous and ovigerous females. Estimated asymptotic carapace length (CL∞) and growth coefficient (K) showed higher values in females (CL∞=30.21 mm, K=0.450 year-1 ) comparatively to males (CL∞=28.61 mm, K=0.430 year-1 ), resulting in better overall growth performance in females. The maximum life span (tmax) was estimated at 6.81 years for combined sexes, 6.97 for males and 6.66 for females, however 99.95% of the individuals were younger than 3 years. Although a seasonal spawning season was evident from late summer to late autumn, reproduction may be prolonged throughout the year since ovigerous females are present in all months and achieving sexual maturity at 14.61 mm. The recruitment pattern was continuous throughout the year with a major peak occurring in spring. The total mortality (Z) and fishing mortality (F) were higher in females than in males while natural mortality (M) was similar between groups.
- Evidence for trophic differences between live and bycatch oceanic juvenile loggerhead sea turtlesPublication . Raposo, Cheila; Patrício, Ana Rita; Catry, Paulo; Dellinger, Thomas; Granadeiro, José P.The loggerhead sea turtle Caretta caretta is a vulnerable migratory species that spends its frst years of life in the open sea. During this developmental phase, loggerheads can be found foraging in the epipelagic zone of the waters surrounding the Madeira Archipelago, providing a rare opportunity to gather information on the ecology of its oceanic developmental stage. In this study, we characterized the isotopic niche of these juveniles, using stable isotope analysis. We assessed two groups of turtles, turtles captured alive (n=24) and turtles captured as bycatch on local longlines (n=12), and explored whether animals caught in the local fshing gear represented a random sample of the population, or whether there is some evidence for a specialized foraging behaviour. We found that turtle bycatch had a signifcantly higher mean stable nitrogen isotope value in whole blood (δ15N=8.5±0.6‰ SD) compared to the group of turtles captured alive in the same period (δ15N=7.6±0.5‰ SD), indicating that they had a diferent diet. While there was a tendency for turtle bycatch to be slightly larger, we found no efect of body size on δ15N values. We propose a distinct foraging behaviour strategy hypothesis, with a group of turtles being more susceptible to interactions with fsheries and thus having a higher mortality risk, which should motivate the implementation of existing guidelines to reduce sea turtle bycatch.
- Fish prey of the sympatric Galápagos fur seals and sea lions: seasonal variation and niche separationPublication . Dellinger, Thomas; Trillmich, FritzAnalysis of fish otoliths in scats and vomits of Galápagos fur seals (Arctocephalus galapagoensis) and Galápagos sea lions (Zalophus californianus wollebaeki) was used to determine the numerical composition of the diets for the post-El Niño year 1983, the cold seasons in 1984 and 1985, and the warm season in 1986. Between 84 and 99% of all otoliths in fur seal scats were from myctophids and bathylagids. The fur seals’ diet included 26 species. Only 3 species contributed more than 1% of otoliths. No seasonal differences in diet were found. Sea lion samples contained a mean of 14 otoliths. Sardines (Sardinops sagax) contributed 75–85% of otoliths. Sea lions preyed on 24 species, but only 3 surpassed 1% abundance. Seasonality was not reflected in the sea lions’ diet. After the 1982–1983 El Niño, the diets of both species deviated from those in all other years of the study. Food-niche overlap between the two sympatric species was almost non-existent. This is hard to understand, based on our knowledge of the diving capabilities of the two species, but reflects the fact that Galápagos fur seals are nighttime foragers and sea lions are daytime foragers.
- Helminth component community of the loggerhead sea Turtle,Caretta caretta from Madeira Archipelago, PortugalPublication . Valente, Ana Luisa; Delgado, Cláudia; Moreira, Cláudia; Ferreira, Sandra; Dellinger, Thomas; Carvalho, Miguel A. A. Pinheiro de; Costa, GraçaThe helminth fauna of pelagic-stage loggerhead sea turtles, Caretta caretta, is still poorly known. Here, we describe the helminth-component community of healthy, free-ranging juvenile loggerhead sea turtles captured in the waters around Madeira Island, Portugal. Fifty-seven were used in this study. The esophagus, stomach, intestine, liver, gallbladder, spleen, kidneys, trachea, bronchi, urinary bladder, heart, left and right aortas, and coelomic cavity were macroscopically inspected; organs and tissues were removed and washed through a sieve. A search for parasites was made using a stereoscopic microscope; recovered parasites were fixed and stored in 70% alcohol until staining and identification. Prevalence, mean intensity, and mean abundance values were recorded. In total, 156 parasite specimens belonging to 9 species were found: nematodes included Anisakis simplex s.l. (larvae) and an unidentified species; digenetic trematodes present were Enodiotrema megachondrus, Rhytidodes gelatinosus, Pyelosomum renicapite, and Calycodes anthos; acanthocephalans included Bolbosoma vasculosum and Rhadinorhynchus pristis; a single cestode, Nybelinia sp., was present. Parasite infections were found to have both low prevalences and intensities. Possible reasons for this include the oligotrophic conditions of the pelagic habitat around Madeira; a 'dilution effect' because of the vastness of the area; and the small size, and thus ingestion rate, of the turtles. Results are discussed in terms of the various turtle populations that may use the waters surrounding Madeira. This work provides valuable information on the parasite fauna of a poorly known stage in the life of loggerhead sea turtles, thereby filling a fundamental gap with regard to features of the parasite fauna in this species.
- Identification of likely foraging habitat of pelagic loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) in the North Atlantic through analysis of telemetry track sinuosityPublication . McCarthy, Abigail L.; Heppell, Selina; Royer, Francois; Freitas, Carla; Dellinger, ThomasChanges in the behavior of individual animals in response to environmental characteristics can provide important information about habitat preference, as well as the relative risk that animals may face based on the amount of time spent in hazardous areas. We analyzed movement and habitat affinities of ten log gerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) tagged with satellite transmitters in the spring and fall of 1998 near Madeira, Portugal for periods of 2–10 months. We analyzed the behavior of these individuals in relation to the marine environment they occupied. As a measure of behavior we calculated the straightness index (SI), the ratio of the displacement of the animal to the total distance traveled, for individual weekly seg ments of the 10 tracks. We then extracted information about chlorophyll a concentration, sea-surface temperature (SST), bathymetry, and geostrophic current of the ocean in a 20-km buffer surrounding the tracks, and examined their relationship to the straightness index using generalized linear models. Chlorophyll a value, bathymetry and SST were significantly related to the straightness index of the tracks of all ten animals, as was the circular standard deviation of the geostrophic current (Wald’s test: p = 0.001, p = 0.008, p = 0.025, and p = 0.049, respectively). We found a significant negative relationship between straightness index and chlorophyll, and positive relationships with ocean depth and SST indicat ing that animals are spending more time and searching more thoroughly in areas with high chlorophyll concentrations and in areas that are shallower, while moving in straight paths through very warm areas. We also found a positive relationship between straightness index and the circular standard deviation of surrounding geostrophic currents suggesting that these turtles are more likely to move in a straight line when in the presence of diffuse, less-powerful currents. Based on these relationships, we propose that conservation planning to reduce overlap of turtles with fishing operations should take into account the locations of bathymetric features such as seamounts and upwelling locations where chlorophyll concen trations are high. This analysis is an effective way to characterize areas of high-use habitat for satellite tagged marine vertebrates, and allows for comparisons of these characteristics between species and among individuals.
- Larval cestodes infecting the deep-water fish, Cataetyx laticeps (Pisces: Bythitidae) from Madeira Archipelago, Atlantic OceanPublication . Costa, Graça; Khadem, Mahnaz; Dellinger, Thomas; Biscoito, Manuel; Moreira, Egberto MeloParasites of deep-water fishes are less known in comparison to the parasites of fishes living in the demersal and epipelagic ocean zones. In the present research note we report the occurrence of larval trypanorhynch cestodes in a rare deep-water fish, the deep-water brotula, Cataetyx laticeps. Based on the 28S rDNA (region D1-D3) sequence homology and the phylogenetic analysis, the larval cestodes are putatively assigned to the genus Grillotia. It is suggested that the definitive host of this trypanorhynch is a batoid.
- Mar e recursos marinhos no arquipélago da MadeiraPublication . Dellinger, Thomas
- Prospective study of the fishery of the shrimp Plesionika narval (Fabricius, 1787) in the Northeastern AtlanticPublication . Sousa, R.; Pinho, M. R.; Delgado, J.; Biscoito, M.; Pinto, A. R.; Dellinger, Thomas; Gouveia, L.; Carvalho, D.; Henriques, P.Several experimental surveys were carried out in the Northeastern Atlantic, Madeira archipelago from 1991 to 2008 to explore new fisheries resources. This study examined the selectivity of bottom and floating traps and the analysis of yield-per-recruit (YPR) and biomass-per-recruit (BPR) providing helpful insight to the management of the shrimp Plesionika narval. A total of 28,262 specimens were sampled and the analysis of length at first capture returned higher values when using floating traps indicating that these traps are more selective, exerting less pressure on the resource. The YPR and BPR analysis showed that the stock is under exploited for the studied area and suggests that the use of floating traps in the commercial fisheries of P. narval is recommended, which will allow a higher maximum allowable limit of exploitation and greater yield. The results suggest that P. narval has the potential to support a viable and sustainable fishery using floating traps.