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Project Paola |
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| Sea Turtle
Symposium
4-5 March 1997 Orlando, U.S.A.
Dr. Flegra Bentivegna*, Angela PagHalonga* * STAZIONE ZOOLOGICA Anton Dohrn, Villa Comunale 1, 80121 Napoli ITALY STATUS OF THE SEA TURTLES IN THE GULF OF NAPLES AND PRELIMINARY STUDY OF MIGRATION.ABSTRACT The present study was performed under the auspices of the Sea Turtle Conservation Pro~am that has been conducted in the Gulf of Naples (Italy) by the Zoological Station since 1983. All information, collected from 1993 to 1996, on marine turtles is studied and evaluated. Data on the number and size of captured sea turtles, method of capture and type of damage suffered is recorded. The feeding habits of sea turtles and the impact of anthropic pollution was explored using fecal and stomach content analysis.This gives a measure of the status of the Mediterranean sea turtle population and, in general, defines the degree of danger present in the Gulf of Naples to this species . The dispersal and migratory movements of Mediterranean marine turtles are completely unknown. F or that in October 1995 we began to track a loggerhead using satellite telemetry. The results seems to show that most loggerheads found in the mid-southern to southern regions of the Tyrrenian Sea come from the eastern basin of the Mediterranean Sea.
![]() © 1997 MEDASSET/H.C.U.A.R./photo: Costas Papaconstantinou INTRODUCTION The present study was performed under the auspices of the Sea Turtle Conservation Program that has been conducted in the Gulf of Naples (Italy) since 1983 (Bentivegna et al, 1986;1992;1994). The Gulf of Naples, located on the western coast of Italy and opening directly to the Mediterranean Sea, is frequented by the loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta). The data collected over the last four years includes the number and size of specimens recovered, the time and method of recovery, and the probable cause of injury. These data were used to evaluate the loggerhead turtle situation in the Gulf of Naples, an area of the Mediterranean Sea which has never before been considered in studies of this species.Loggerhead feeding habits in offshore waters and the impact of anthropic pollution were also studied in order to define the level of danger that the Gulf of Naples presents to the this species. It was known from previous studies that loggerheads do not come into the Gulf to reproduce, but rather, to feed (Bentivegna et al, 1994). In all probability, they originate from the eastern Mediterranean basin where there are numerous egg deposition sites (Venizelos, 1991). In order to verify this hypothesis, we began to track a loggerhead sea turtle in the Mediterranean using satellite telemetry. The tracking study helped to better understand the life history of the loggerhead in the Mediterranean Sea. METHODS ![]() © 1997 MEDASSET The map also shows the satellite tracking of "Gaeta", a female loggerhead turtle released by Statione Zoologica in July 1995. PaolaPTT transmissions were monitored by the ARGOS tracking system which uses NOAA satellites that guarantee complete coverage over the earth‘s surface. Each satellite was equipped with a data collection and location system (DCLS) that received and recorded signals from the PTT during an overpass. RESULTS and DISCUSSION Most of the recovered specimens had swallowed either non- biodegradable material, such as plastic and tar, or little pieces of wood, or feathers. This indicates that there is a high level of anthropic pollution in the Gulf and that, as the loggerhead turtle approaches the coast to feed, it searches through the floating garbage for food. In addition, the presence of algae, sea-weed, squid parts, crustaceans (Parthenope angulifrons, Squilla mantis), Gastropods and fish parts in the feces or stomachs of the recovered specimens indicates that the loggerhead feeds at all depths in the Gulf of Naples, from the surface to the bottom. During the eight months that the tracking study lasted, the loggerhead travelled a route 2600 km long. Immediately after its release of Sicily, in October, the turtle turned southeast and swam continuously for two months (Oct-Nov) and maintained an average speed of one kilometer per hour. The animal crossed the straits of Messina and headed southeast to the Isle of Crete, and then turned southeast to Crete, and then to Lybia. It then returned to Crete and went southeast Turkey. It is likely that during the winter season the loggerhead searches for warm water. The average surface temperatures (16°-18°C) on its route were higher than in other areas of the Mediterranean where an isolated yearly isotherm averaging 20°C (Tortonese, 1951). The stopping points on the turtle‘s route may be explained in terms of a search for a nesting site. In fact the turtle approached known nesting sites, e.g., she stopped in Lybia where a very large nesting site has recently been discovered (Venizelos, 1996). It is also likely that the loggerhead turtles which
visit the Gulf of Naples come from the warmer eastern Mediterranean waters.
Tagged female loggerheads nesting in Greece (Margaritoulis, 1988) have
been shown to disperse over a very wide area of the central Mediterranean
extending west to Sardinia. By taking advantage of the favourable currents
off the coast of Naples from the southwest to the northeast (Ovchinnikov,
1966), the loggerhead comes into the Gulf of Naples in order to search
for feeding grounds. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
LITERATURE CITED
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