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Regional Management Units for Marine Turtles: A Novel Framework for Prioritizing Conservation and Research across Multiple Scales
Abstract
Background: Resolving threats to widely distributed marine megafauna requires definition
of the geographic distributions of both the threats as well as the population unit(s)
of interest. In turn, because individual threats can operate on varying spatial scales,
their impacts can affect different segments of a population of the same species. Therefore,
integration of multiple tools and techniques - including site-based monitoring, genetic
analyses, mark-recapture studies and telemetry - can facilitate robust definitions
of population segments at multiple biological and spatial scales to address different
management and research challenges. Methodology/Principal Findings: To address these
issues for marine turtles, we collated all available studies on marine turtle biogeography,
including nesting sites, population abundances and trends, population genetics, and
satellite telemetry. We georeferenced this information to generate separate layers
for nesting sites, genetic stocks, and core distributions of population segments of
all marine turtle species. We then spatially integrated this information from fine-to
coarse-spatial scales to develop nested envelope models, or Regional Management Units
(RMUs), for marine turtles globally. Conclusions/Significance: The RMU framework is
a solution to the challenge of how to organize marine turtles into units of protection
above the level of nesting populations, but below the level of species, within regional
entities that might be on independent evolutionary trajectories. Among many potential
applications, RMUs provide a framework for identifying data gaps, assessing high diversity
areas for multiple species and genetic stocks, and evaluating conservation status
of marine turtles. Furthermore, RMUs allow for identification of geographic barriers
to gene flow, and can provide valuable guidance to marine spatial planning initiatives
that integrate spatial distributions of protected species and human activities. In
addition, the RMU framework - including maps and supporting metadata - will be an
iterative, user-driven tool made publicly available in an online application for comments,
improvements, download and analysis.
Type
Other articleSubject
loggerhead sea-turtlesevolutionarily-significant-units
caretta-caretta
chelonia-mydas
mitochondrial-dna
green turtles
population-structure
genetic-structure
dermochelys-coriacea
satellite tracking
biology
multidisciplinary sciences
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/4590Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1371/journal.pone.0015465Citation
Wallace,Bryan P.;DiMatteo,Andrew D.;Hurley,Brendan J.;Finkbeiner,Elena M.;Bolten,Alan
B.;Chaloupka,Milani Y.;Hutchinson,Brian J.;Alberto Abreu-Grobois,F.;Amorocho,Diego;Bjorndal,Karen
A.;Bourjea,Jerome;Bowen,Brian W.;Briseno Duenas,Raquel;Casale,Paolo;Choudhury,B. C.;Costa,Alice;Dutton,Peter
H.;Fallabrino,Alejandro;Girard,Alexandre;Girondot,Marc;Godfrey,Matthew H.;Hamann,Mark;Lopez-Mendilaharsu,Milagros;Marcovaldi,Maria
Angela;Mortimer,Jeanne A.;Musick,John A.;Nel,Ronel;Pilcher,Nicolas J.;Seminoff,Jeffrey
A.;Troeng,Sebastian;Witherington,Blair;Mast,Roderic B.. 2010. Regional Management
Units for Marine Turtles: A Novel Framework for Prioritizing Conservation and Research
across Multiple Scales. Plos One 5(12): e15465-e15465.
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Matthew H. Godfrey
Adjunct Associate Professor

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