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Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) to compare foraging sea turtle density and distribution of sea turtles in two contrasting habitats in the Chagos Archipelago / CARINA REES

Swansea University Author: CARINA REES

Abstract

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) facilitate observation of elusive species or remote locations, and are increasingly used to survey marine habitats. Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are a conservation tool used to protect marine species, and regular population assessments can establish if MPAs are effec...

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Published: Swansea 2022
Institution: Swansea University
Degree level: Master of Research
Degree name: MRes
Supervisor: Esteban, Nicole
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa59715
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Abstract: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) facilitate observation of elusive species or remote locations, and are increasingly used to survey marine habitats. Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are a conservation tool used to protect marine species, and regular population assessments can establish if MPAs are effectively facilitating the recovery of endangered species. Sea turtles in the Western Indian Ocean have been historically exploited through trade and by-catch causing a reduction in numbers. Here, UAVs were utilised to assess the population density and distribution of green (Chelonia mydas) and hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata) turtles between ocean and lagoon environments in the Chagos Archipelago. Analysis protocols were developed to process UAV imagery, including carapace-measurement techniques, and certainty-classing turtle observations (Definite, Probable or Possible). Along 20 km of coastline, 5.13 km2 was surveyed across 11 days between July 2019 – February 2021 resulting in a high-certainty estimate of 381 turtles and a low-certainty estimate of 660. Species and life-stage identification implicate Chagos as developmental habitat for immature hawksbill turtles: 78.47% (n = 299/381) of identified definite turtles were immature, of which 66.55% (n = 199/299) were hawksbill. Diego Garcia Ocean Site 1, West sites and Turtle Cove were significant turtle hotspots (high-certainty results: 257.19 individuals/km2, 146.15 individuals/km2, and 135.08 individuals/km2, respectively), while Marina sites were least-dense (0 - 4.87 individuals/km2). Results for low-certainty data were comparable: 325.27 individuals/km2 in Diego Garcia Site 1, followed by 309.27 and 292.67 individuals/km2 in Turtle Cove. Population density decreased significantly with increasing distance from the shore, and decreased with increasing distance from Turtle Cove. Green turtles were smaller (50.33 ± 17.65 cm straight-carapace length, SCL) than hawksbill turtles (53.16 ± 11.17 cm SCL). This study highlights the Chagos Archipelago as developmental habitat for immature turtles, and demonstrates the applicability of UAVs for in-situ population monitoring to infer conservation status of marine megafauna.
Keywords: Unmanned Aerial System, drone survey, marine turtle, endangered species, population monitoring
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering