Are we working towards global research priorities for management and conservation of sea turtles?

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Rees, AF

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Alfaro-Shigueto, J

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Barata, PCR

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Bjorndal, KA

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Bolten, AB

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Bourjea, J

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Broderick, AC

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Campbell, LM

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Cardona, L

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Carreras, C

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Casale, P

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Ceriani, SA

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Dutton, PH

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Eguchi, T

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Formia, A

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Fuentes, MMPB

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Fuller, WJ

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Girondot, M

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Godfrey, MH

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Hamann, M

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Hart, KM

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Hays, GC

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Hochscheid, S

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Kaska, Y

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Jensen, MP

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Mangel, JC

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Mortimer, JA

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Naro-Maciel, E

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Ng, CKY

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Nichols, WJ

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Phillott, AD

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Reina, RD

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Revuelta, O

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Schofield, G

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Seminoff, JA

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Shanker, K

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Tomás, J

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van de Merwe, JP

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Van Houtan, KS

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Vander Zanden, HB

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Wallace, BP

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Wedemeyer-Strombel, KR

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Work, TM

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Godley, BJ

dc.date.accessioned

2018-11-01T16:57:55Z

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2018-11-01T16:57:55Z

dc.date.issued

2016-12-30

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2018-11-01T16:57:54Z

dc.description.abstract

© The authors 2016. In 2010, an international group of 35 sea turtle researchers refined an initial list of more than 200 research questions into 20 metaquestions that were considered key for management and conservation of sea turtles. These were classified under 5 categories: reproductive biology, biogeography, population ecology, threats and conservation strategies. To obtain a picture of how research is being focused towards these key questions, we undertook a systematic review of the peer-reviewed literature (2014 and 2015) attributing papers to the original 20 questions. In total, we reviewed 605 articles in full and from these 355 (59%) were judged to substantively address the 20 key questions, with others focusing on basic science and monitoring. Progress to answering the 20 questions was not uniform, and there were biases regarding focal turtle species, geographic scope and publication outlet. Whilst it offers some meaningful indications as to effort, quantifying peer-reviewed literature output is ob viously not the only, and possibly not the best, metric for understanding progress towards informing key conservation and management goals. Along with the literature review, an international group based on the original project consortium was assigned to critically summarise recent progress towards answering each of the 20 questions. We found that significant research is being expended towards global priorities for management and conservation of sea turtles. Although highly variable, there has been significant progress in all the key questions identified in 2010. Undertaking this critical review has highlighted that it may be timely to undertake one or more new prioritizing exercises. For this to have maximal benefit we make a range of recommendations for its execution. These include a far greater engagement with social sciences, widening the pool of contributors and focussing the questions, perhaps disaggregating ecology and conservation.

dc.identifier.issn

1863-5407

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1613-4796

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17617

dc.language

English

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Inter-Research Science Center

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Endangered Species Research

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10.3354/esr00801

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Science & Technology

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Life Sciences & Biomedicine

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Biodiversity Conservation

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Biodiversity & Conservation

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Sea turtle

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Marine conservation

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Evidence-based conservation

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Systematic review

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Research prioritisation

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GULF-OF-MEXICO

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LOGGERHEAD CARETTA-CARETTA

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FIBROPAPILLOMA-ASSOCIATED HERPESVIRUS

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JUVENILE GREEN TURTLES

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ERETMOCHELYS-IMBRICATA LINNAEUS

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PERSISTENT ORGANIC POLLUTANTS

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MYDAS TESTUDINES CHELONIIDAE

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MARINE DEBRIS INGESTION

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WESTERN NORTH-ATLANTIC

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EASTERN PACIFIC-OCEAN

dc.title

Are we working towards global research priorities for management and conservation of sea turtles?

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Campbell, LM|0000-0001-8731-3699

pubs.begin-page

337

pubs.end-page

382

pubs.issue

1

pubs.organisational-group

Nicholas School of the Environment

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Duke

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Marine Science and Conservation

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

31

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