Artigo Revisado por pares

Diving behaviour of an immature Kemp's ridley turtle ( Lepidochelys kempii ) from Gullivan Bay, Ten Thousand Islands, south-west Florida

2006; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 86; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0025315406013877

ISSN

1469-7769

Autores

Christopher R. Sasso, W. N. Witzell,

Tópico(s)

Avian ecology and behavior

Resumo

We report on the first successfully deployed time-depth recorder on an immature Kemp's ridley turtle in a coastal foraging habitat in south-west Florida. The turtle exhibited three distinct dive patterns interpreted as: post release stress (26 h) post release transition (8 h) and normal (>34 h). The normal pattern consists of short periods on the surface followed by longer periods on the bottom in 2–3 m of water which we speculate is foraging behaviour. Overall, the turtle spent 94% of the time submerged during the normal period. The turtle spent significantly more time submerged at night than during the day, suggesting the turtle was resting. Night dives were consistently longer than dawn, day or dusk dives.

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