4.3 Article

Establishing Reference Demography for Conservation: A Case Study of Macrochelys temminckii in Spring Creek, Georgia

期刊

HERPETOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS
卷 30, 期 -, 页码 21-33

出版社

HERPETOLOGISTS LEAGUE
DOI: 10.1655/HERPMONOGRAPHS-D-15-00004

关键词

Alligator Snapping Turtles; Conservation; Demography; Macrochelys temminckii; Mark-recapture; Population model; Population structure; Survival

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资金

  1. Georgia Department of Natural Resources
  2. US Fish and Wildlife Service
  3. Georgia Southern University (GSU) Faculty Research and Service Grants
  4. GSU Graduate Student Professional Development Fund
  5. GSU College of Science and Technology Academic Excellence Grant
  6. Organization for Tropical Studies Graduate Research Fellowship (Christiane and Christopher Tyson fellowship)
  7. Organization for Tropical Studies Graduate Research Fellowship (Dole Food fellowship)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The conservation of large, long-lived turtle species can be a challenging issue because their life-history strategies make populations sensitive to changes in adult survivorship and populations may be difficult to sample. The Alligator Snapping Turtle (Macrochelys temminckii) is a large freshwater turtle species occurring in North America for which commercial harvest has severely reduced populations throughout the species range. Given recent population declines and a general deficit of demographic knowledge for Macrochelys, we conducted a mark-recapture study of M. temminckii from 1997-2013 in Spring Creek, Georgia, USA. We made 166 captures of 75 individuals using baited hoop-net traps and skin-diving searches. The observed and estimated population structure described the adult sex ratio as even and adults as more abundant than juveniles. Apparent survival was higher for adult males (0.98) and females (0.95) than for juveniles (0.86), and we estimated a population density of 13-14 turtles/stream kilometer. The survival estimates for adult M. temminckii are among the highest of all freshwater turtle species reported in the literature. We used the empirical demographic parameters described here and a literature review to build an updated population model for M. temminckii; the model estimated a finite rate of population increase consistent with a growing population (lambda = 1.036) at Spring Creek, and population viability analysis found the population growing over the next 50 yr in 100% of simulations. Application of our model to published survival estimates from two impacted western populations indicated a declining population (lambda = 0.563) with a high risk of extirpation in Oklahoma and a population with a slow rate of decline (lambda = 0.978) but approaching stability in Arkansas. Simulations identified combinations of survival values which generate viable populations and also characterized population structure resulting from viable scenarios. This is the first study to document a stable and viable population of Macrochelys. We suggest that the population parameters described at Spring Creek are the best approximation of reference demographic conditions for Macrochelys to date, and this study provides a general framework applicable for large, long-lived, endangered turtle species for which demographic data are unavailable.

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