Satellite tagging of female hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) nesting on Groote Eylandt, Northern Territory, 2009-2011

Clive McMahon, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania (UTAS)dvanced Studies, Charles Darwin University (CDU)

Dataset credit

OBIS and OBIS Australia

Contacts

RoleNameOrganization 
Primary contact Clive McMahon Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania (UTAS)dvanced Studies, Charles Darwin University (CDU)
Secondary contact Xavier Hoenner Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania (UTAS)dvanced Studies, Charles Darwin University (CDU)
Secondary contact Scott Whiting Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions
Secondary contact Dave Watts CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere

Citation

Hoenner, Xavier, Whiting, Scott D., Hamann, Mark, Limpus, Colin J., Hindell, Mark A., and McMahon, Clive R. (2015). High-resolution movements of critically endangered hawksbill turtles help elucidate conservation requirements in northern Australia. Marine and Freshwater Research http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/MF15013
Mcmahon, C. 2020. Satellite tagging of female hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) nesting on Groote Eylandt, Northern Territory, 2009-2011. Data downloaded from OBIS-SEAMAP (http://seamap.env.duke.edu/dataset/103152550) on yyyy-mm-dd and originated from OBIS (https://obis.org/dataset/c5b1eba6-ac0d-4a72-a6d6-580aac693cb1)

Abstract

Hawksbill turtles are classified Critically Endangered by the IUCN following intense commercial exploitation that decimated global stocks. Despite Australia supporting one of the largest breeding aggregations worldwide, hawksbill turtle biology and ecology remains poorly documented, especially for populations nesting in the Northern Territory. This study focused on the internationally significant hawksbill turtle population breeding in Groote Eylandt in the Gulf of Carpentaria, and aimed at providing high resolution information for managing this critically endangered species. By using multiple state-of-the-art analytical frameworks and combining satellite telemetry, hydrological modelling, and tag recapture data, we (i) assessed habitat utilisation during the inter-nesting and foraging periods, (ii) quantified migratory behaviour for better understanding of navigational strategies , and (iii) simulated post-hatchling dispersal patterns, which we subsequently compared to the location of adult foraging grounds.
Data downloaded from IMOS 14-June-2017 from https://portal.aodn.org.au/search?uuid=9f16351d-eec1-4223-a761-c711ebb9c7d9 and taxonomy matched to WoRMS.

Purpose

N/A

Supplemental information

This dataset was downloaded from OBIS (https://obis.org/). The records for only marine mammals, seabirds, sea turtles and rays and sharks were extracted. Records with no longitude/latitude or no date (eventDate) were excluded.
OBIS dataset page:
https://obis.org/dataset/c5b1eba6-ac0d-4a72-a6d6-580aac693cb1
Data Provider's dataset page:
http://ogc-act.csiro.au/ipt/resource?r=aodn_nt_sattag_hawksbill_gps_location_data

References

Hoenner, Xavier, Whiting, Scott D., Hamann, Mark, Limpus, Colin J., Hindell, Mark A., and McMahon, Clive R. (2015). High-resolution movements of critically endangered hawksbill turtles help elucidate conservation requirements in northern Australia. Marine and Freshwater Research http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/MF15013

Attributes

Overview

This section explains attributes included in the original dataset. OBIS-SEAMAP restricts the attributes available to the public to date/time, lat/lon and species names/counts only. Should you need other attributes described here, you are encouraged to contact the data provider.

Attributes described below represent those in the original dataset provided by the provider.
All attributes are included in the downloadable file (CSV or ESRI File Geodatabase) for "Complete Set of Dataset".

Attributes in dataset

Attribute (table column)Description
oidInternal ID
idRecord ID
dataset_idDataset ID
scientificnameScientific name
vernacularnameVernacular name
aphiaidAphia ID
taxonranktaxononic rank
individualcountGroup size / individual count
eventdateEvent date (precision varies)
eventtimeEvent time
decimallatitudeLatitude in decimal degrees
decimallongitudeLongitude in decimal degrees
coordinateprecisionCoordinate precision
catalognumberCatalog number
collectioncodeCollection code
occurrencestatusOccurrence status
basisofrecordBasis of record (HumanObservation / MachineObservation)
modifiedDate/time the record was modified
node_idNode ID
occurrenceidOccurrence ID
occurrenceremarksOccurrence remarks
eventidEvent ID
institutioncodeInstitution code
lifestageLife stage
sexGender of the animal if known
speciesSpecies by provider
datasetidDataset ID by provider
countryCountry
localityLocation of ocean
waterbodyDetails of ocean
droppedFlag indicating the record was dropped (always false)
absenceFlag indicating the record represents the absence of the species (always false)
marineFlag indicating the record is for marine life (always true)
OBIS-SEAMAP ID103152550
Seabirds0
Marine mammals0
Sea turtles5,187
Rays and sharks0
Other species0
Non spatial0
Non species0
Total5,187
Date, Begin2009-08-05
Date, End2011-04-22
Temporal prec.111000
Latitude-19.33 - -8.10
Longitude129.51 - 142.68
Coord. prec.6 decimal digits
PlatformVarious
Data typeAnimal sighting
EffortN/A
Traveled (km)0
0
Contr. throughiOBIS
Registered2020-06-30
Updated2021-02-05
StatusPublished
Sharing policy CC-BY (All)
Shared with None
See metadata in static HTML
See metadata in FGDC XML
See download history / statistics