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Remote submerged banks and mesophotic ecosystems can provide key habitat for endangered marine megafauna

Version 2 2024-06-20, 00:04
Version 1 2024-03-05, 03:13
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-20, 00:04 authored by Graeme HaysGraeme Hays, Jacques-Olivier Laloë, Jeanne A Mortimer, Alex RattrayAlex Rattray, Jared TrompJared Tromp, Nicole Esteban
The importance of some ecosystems remains poorly understood. We showed that mesophotic ecosystems (30 to 150 m) are a key habitat for a critically endangered species, with strong evidence that a globally important population of adult hawksbill turtles ( Eretmochelys imbricata ) almost exclusively foraged at these depths on remote submerged banks. This discovery highlights the need for such areas to be included in conservation planning, for example, as part of the United Nations High Seas Treaty. We equipped nesting turtles with Fastloc-GPS (Global Positioning System) satellite tags at an Indian Ocean breeding area and they all traveled to deep foraging sites (6765 days of tracking data across 22 individuals including 183,921 dive-depth measurements) rather than shallow coral reef sites. Both chart depths and depth data relayed from the tags indicated that turtles foraged at mesophotic depths, the modal dive depths being between 35 and 40 m. We calculate that 55,554 km 2 of the western Indian Ocean alone consists of submerged banks between 30 and 60 m.

History

Journal

Science Advances

Volume

10

Pagination

1-5

Location

Washington, D.C.

ISSN

2375-2548

eISSN

2375-2548

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

8

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science

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