Crowdsourcing conservation: unveiling Taiwan's sea turtle foraging grounds, emerging threats, and residency with broad societal engagement.

IF 2.3 Q2 ECOLOGY
Chia-Ling Fong, Daphne Z Hoh, Huai Su, Peng-Yu Chen, Chia-Chen Tsai, Kelly W H Tseng, Hao-Chih Huang, Jun-Yi Wu, Yoko Nozawa, Benny K K Chan
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Abstract

Background: Determining sea turtle foraging grounds, emerging threats, and population status are essential for conservation management. Crowdsourced science is a recently recognized approach that enables internet-based data collection, providing important contributions to scientific goals while also benefiting society and public education. This study is based on the published dataset from TurtleSpot Taiwan (2017-2022) with the aim to leverage crowdsourced data to determine sea turtle foraging grounds, emerging threats, demography, and residency patterns in Taiwan.

Results: We identified three green turtle (Chelonia mydas) foraging grounds in Taiwan (Liuqiu Island, Kenting, and Green Island), defined as sites with > 100 sightings and > 50 individuals. Among all sites, Liuqiu Island contributed 77% of the total sightings, suggesting this island is a hotspot. Emerging threats to foraging aggregations of sea turtles in Taiwan were evident from the reported sightings, with ~ 10% of the total sightings involving turtles with fishing line entanglement, ingested debris, missing flippers, or injuries. Most of these sightings occurred in Liuqiu Island, indicating a significant level of human-turtle disturbance. Residency patterns identified from sighting data showed that 43.4% of individuals stayed in the same area for one or more years, with adult-sized turtle residency greater than that of immature turtles.

Conclusions: Taiwan supports healthy foraging grounds for green turtles, where adults often stay for more than one year and with dynamic populations of younger individuals. However, despite a certain number of foraging green turtles observed in Liuqiu Island, many of these turtles displayed injuries. This high population density combined with increased injury frequency suggests that a comprehensive management plan for turtle foraging grounds is urgently needed, including measures to reduce boat speeds in hotspot areas and strict regulations on coastal human activity.

众包保护:揭露台湾海龟的觅食地、新出现的威胁,以及广泛的社会参与。
背景:确定海龟的觅食地、新出现的威胁和种群状况对保护管理至关重要。众包科学是最近被认可的一种方法,它使基于互联网的数据收集成为可能,为科学目标做出重要贡献,同时也有益于社会和公共教育。本研究基于TurtleSpot Taiwan(2017-2022)公布的数据集,旨在利用众包数据来确定台湾海龟的觅食地,新出现的威胁,人口统计和居住模式。结果:在台湾发现了3个绿龟(Chelonia mydas)觅食地(柳丘岛、垦丁岛和绿岛),定义为有bb100只、bb50只的地点。在所有的景点中,柳丘岛贡献了77%的目击次数,表明这个岛是一个热点。从报告的目击事件中可以明显看出,对台湾海龟觅食群体的新威胁,大约10%的目击事件涉及到鱼线缠绕,摄入碎片,缺少鳍或受伤的海龟。这些发现大多发生在柳丘岛,表明人类对海龟的干扰程度很高。根据观察数据确定的居住模式显示,43.4%的个体在同一地区停留了一年或一年以上,成年龟的居住时间大于幼年龟。结论:台湾为绿海龟提供了健康的觅食地,成年绿海龟通常在那里停留一年以上,并且有动态的年轻个体种群。然而,尽管在柳丘岛上观察到一定数量的觅食绿海龟,但这些海龟中的许多都有受伤的迹象。这种高种群密度加上伤害频率的增加表明,迫切需要对海龟觅食地进行全面的管理计划,包括采取措施降低热点地区的船只速度,并严格限制沿海人类活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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