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Attum, O., Cutshall, C. D., Eberly, K., Day, H., & Tietjen, B. (2013). Is there really no place like home? movement, site fidelity, and survival probability of translocated and resident turtles. Biodiversity and Conservation, 22(13-14), 3185–3195. 
Added by: Admin (06 Jan 2014 18:23:59 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-013-0578-1
BibTeX citation key: Attum2013
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Categories: General
Keywords: Habitat - habitat, Kinosternidae, Schildkröten - turtles + tortoises, Sternotherus odoratus, Verhalten - ethology
Creators: Attum, Cutshall, Day, Eberly, Tietjen
Collection: Biodiversity and Conservation
Views: 10/927
Views index: 18%
Popularity index: 4.5%
Abstract     
Wildlife translocations, the deliberate movement of wild individuals from one part of their distribution to another, are increasingly being used as a conservation tool. Despite the popularity of translocations as a conservation technique, translocations are often not successful as a result of excessive movement, poor release site fidelity, and low survival. This study compares the movement patterns, site fidelity, and survival probability of resident and hard-released musk turtles (Sternotherus odoratus) in a complex of patchy distributed wetlands. Our results are different from most translocation studies as the majority of translocated turtles had movement (minimum convex polygon area, total distance moved, number of wetlands used, and the number of movement shifts between wetlands), release site fidelity, and wetland fidelity patterns that were similar to resident turtles. In addition, the survival probabilities of resident and translocated turtles were both high. We believe the combination of poor overland movement capabilities and the patchy distribution of wetlands surrounded by a strong boundary matrix of terrestrial habitat, potentially increased the costs of leaving the wetland. The high costs of travelling overland to more distant wetlands may have constrained the translocated turtles dispersal from the release site and increased release site fidelity. Our study suggests that hard-release translocations may be an effective conservation method for highly aquatic species unlikely to leave the wetland and travel long overland distances.
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