Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area

A natural experiment was conducted to determine effects of a fossil-fueled power plant on home ranges of east Pacific green turtles Chelonia mydas in an urban foraging ground. The power plant, located in south San Diego Bay, California, USA, co-existed with a resident foraging aggregation of ~60 gre...

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Main Authors: Eguchi, T, Bredvik, J, Graham, S, LeRoux, R, Saunders, B, Seminoff, JA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2020-02-01
Series:Endangered Species Research
Online Access:https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v41/p265-277/
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spelling doaj-ddd49d41019440feae85c6ce1c337adf2020-11-25T04:05:07ZengInter-ResearchEndangered Species Research1863-54071613-47962020-02-014126527710.3354/esr01027Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging areaEguchi, TBredvik, JGraham, SLeRoux, RSaunders, BSeminoff, JAA natural experiment was conducted to determine effects of a fossil-fueled power plant on home ranges of east Pacific green turtles Chelonia mydas in an urban foraging ground. The power plant, located in south San Diego Bay, California, USA, co-existed with a resident foraging aggregation of ~60 green turtles for ~50 yr. It was decommissioned during a long-term green turtle monitoring study, thus providing a rare opportunity to evaluate how the cessation of warm-water effluent affected turtle movements and habitat use in the area. During pre- and post-decommissioning of the power plant, 7 and 23 green turtles, respectively, were equipped with GPS-enabled satellite transmitters. Useful data were obtained from 17 turtles (4 for pre- and 13 for post-decommissioning). Core use areas (50% utilization distribution [UD]) increased from 0.71 to 1.37 km2 after the power plant decommissioning. Increase in post-power plant 50% UD was greater during nighttime (0.52 to 1.44 km2) than daytime (1.32 to 1.43 km2). Furthermore, UDs moved from the effluent channel to an area closer to seagrass pastures, a presumed foraging habitat of the turtles. The observed expansion of green turtle home ranges may increase turtle-human interactions, such as boat strikes, within the foraging ground; this underscores how seemingly innocuous human actions contribute to inadvertent consequences to wildlife. Possible management and conservation actions include increasing awareness of the public regarding turtle presence in the area through signage and education as well as legislating for a reduction in boat speeds in select areas of the bay.https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v41/p265-277/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eguchi, T
Bredvik, J
Graham, S
LeRoux, R
Saunders, B
Seminoff, JA
spellingShingle Eguchi, T
Bredvik, J
Graham, S
LeRoux, R
Saunders, B
Seminoff, JA
Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area
Endangered Species Research
author_facet Eguchi, T
Bredvik, J
Graham, S
LeRoux, R
Saunders, B
Seminoff, JA
author_sort Eguchi, T
title Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area
title_short Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area
title_full Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area
title_fullStr Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area
title_full_unstemmed Effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area
title_sort effects of a power plant closure on home ranges of green turtles in an urban foraging area
publisher Inter-Research
series Endangered Species Research
issn 1863-5407
1613-4796
publishDate 2020-02-01
description A natural experiment was conducted to determine effects of a fossil-fueled power plant on home ranges of east Pacific green turtles Chelonia mydas in an urban foraging ground. The power plant, located in south San Diego Bay, California, USA, co-existed with a resident foraging aggregation of ~60 green turtles for ~50 yr. It was decommissioned during a long-term green turtle monitoring study, thus providing a rare opportunity to evaluate how the cessation of warm-water effluent affected turtle movements and habitat use in the area. During pre- and post-decommissioning of the power plant, 7 and 23 green turtles, respectively, were equipped with GPS-enabled satellite transmitters. Useful data were obtained from 17 turtles (4 for pre- and 13 for post-decommissioning). Core use areas (50% utilization distribution [UD]) increased from 0.71 to 1.37 km2 after the power plant decommissioning. Increase in post-power plant 50% UD was greater during nighttime (0.52 to 1.44 km2) than daytime (1.32 to 1.43 km2). Furthermore, UDs moved from the effluent channel to an area closer to seagrass pastures, a presumed foraging habitat of the turtles. The observed expansion of green turtle home ranges may increase turtle-human interactions, such as boat strikes, within the foraging ground; this underscores how seemingly innocuous human actions contribute to inadvertent consequences to wildlife. Possible management and conservation actions include increasing awareness of the public regarding turtle presence in the area through signage and education as well as legislating for a reduction in boat speeds in select areas of the bay.
url https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v41/p265-277/
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