Habitat-specific environmental characteristics are associated with the movement of male and female loggerhead sea turtles

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Abstract

Linking animal movements to environmental drivers is essential for understanding ecological processes and anticipating species responses to climate change. We investigated habitat-specific movements in a globally significant aggregation of loggerhead turtles ( Caretta caretta ) nesting in Cabo Verde. Satellite tags on 15 adults (12 females, 3 males) provided multi-year tracks spanning breeding, migration, and foraging habitats. Movements and phenology differed by habitat. During the breeding season, females used either coastal areas, remaining within ∼20 m depth, or undertook long looping forays up to 360 km. Males showed two strategies: two remained resident in Cabo Verde waters, including Fra, the largest male tracked (Curved carapace length of 105 cm compared with a male mean of 90.7 ± 10.3 cm), while the third migrated annually to distant foraging grounds and returned ahead of the subsequent breeding season. In foraging habitats, turtles adopted neritic or oceanic strategies: neritic turtles remained localised in warm, productive waters, whereas oceanic turtles ranged widely in deeper, less productive areas. Time- and space-shift analyses showed that oceanic foragers used intermediate sea surface temperature and chlorophyll-a conditions relative to nearby or temporally shifted alternatives, consistent with movement within a thermal–trophic trade-off. Together, these results show how sex, body size, and energy balance drive habitat-specific movement dynamics in a changing ocean.

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