1 / 16

Conservation and Ecology of Marine Reptiles MARE 490 Dr. Turner Summer 2011

Conservation and Ecology of Marine Reptiles MARE 490 Dr. Turner Summer 2011. Foraging Ecology & Nutrition. Role of sea turtles in marine ecosystems Understanding of quantitative aspects of: diet selection digestive processing nutrition

kroger
Download Presentation

Conservation and Ecology of Marine Reptiles MARE 490 Dr. Turner Summer 2011

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Conservation and Ecology of Marine Reptiles MARE 490 Dr. Turner Summer 2011

  2. Foraging Ecology & Nutrition Role of sea turtles in marine ecosystems Understanding of quantitative aspects of: diet selection digestive processing nutrition Coordinate population structure & food web analysis

  3. Biomass Pyramids: Transfer of energy “Whoa, slow down there maestro. There's a New Mexico?” – C. Montgomery Burns Food chain efficiency (gross ecological efficiency) Energy to next trophic level Energy received from lower trophic level = ~2% of light E-> organic substance (autotrophs) ~80-95% lost at each transfer (trophic level)

  4. Ecosystem Energy Flow 500,000 units of solar E ≈ 2% transfer 1 unit of human E converted to human mass ≈ 10% transfer 10,000 units 10 units 1,000 units 100 units

  5. E! Where did the E go?Why is transfer efficiency so low? Loss due to incomplete transfer among trophic levels 1) Not eaten (evades or dies) 2) Inefficient conversion E= P + R + W E= ingested energy P = secondary production R = respiration W = waste

  6. First name Mr, middle name period, last name E “Quit your Jibba Jabba fools!”– Mr. T E= P + R + W Assimilation efficiency (A)= (P + R) P = Secondary Production = growth, fat storage, birth R = Respiration = energy lost through respiration Assimilation efficiency:the percentage of what is initially consumed that becomes incorporated into the consumer

  7. Gonna' teach this sucka a lesson! “As a kid, I got three meals a day. Oatmeal, miss-a-meal and no meal”– Mr. T Assimilation efficiency affected by: 1)Food quality 2)Amount of food 3)Age of consumer Therefore…assimilation is opposite of excretion (waste) E = A + W Energy available to the consumer is 1° a function of assimilation efficiency

  8. Foraging Ecology Tremendous gaps in knowledge Foraging habitat typically separate from nesting & juvenile habitats How do we determine diet in protected species? Feces – pellets Stomach lavage Biochemical techniques Stable isotopes Fatty acids

  9. Movie Green Feeding Ecology Juveniles in pelagic stage – thought to be omnivorous to carnivorous Associated with Sargassum mats? Known to feed on jellies

  10. Green Sea Turtles Empirical evidence of difference in pelagic vs. neretic feeding ecology? RS1 – smaller RS3 – larger Seaborn et al. 2005

  11. Green Sea Turtles Enter neretic habitat and shift to herbivorous diet 20-25 cm (Atl) 35 (Hawaii) Why herbivorous? Lower trophic level; higher energy Niche Low assimilation efficiency Either seagrasses (Caribbean) or seaweeds (Hawaii)

  12. Movie Hawaiian Green Sea Turtles Feed on up to 56 species of algae; typically 9 Green, red, & Brown Feed on several introduced species Minimal feeding on seagrass (Halophila) & invertebrates (jellies & sponges)

  13. Hawaiian Green Sea Turtles Low/no growth in several regions Poor food quality? Assimilation efficiency?

  14. Movie Loggerhead Feeding Ecology Juveniles – associated with Sargassum Current fronts – mixture of drift material; algae, detritus, insects, crustaceans Rely upon jellies

  15. Loggerhead Sea Turtles Adults – feed in benthos Primarily sea pens & crustaceans

  16. Hawksbill Sea Turtles Juveniles – again with the Sargassum Carnivorous pelagic life history Recruit to neretic habitat 20-25cm; 35cm similar to greens

More Related