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JBHP Publications

A chronological bibliography of publications that the JBHP and its affiliates have led or contributed to

  • Links to articles are provided via underlined titles

Mrosovsky, N., Bass, A., Corliss, L.A., Richardson, J.I. and Richardson, T.H. 1992. Pivotal and beach temperatures for hawksbill turtles nesting in Antigua. Canadian Journal of Zoology 70(10), 1920–1925.

 

Bass, A.L., Good, D.A., Bjorndal, K.A., Richardson, J.I., Hillis, Z.M., Horrocks, J.A. and Bowen, B.W. 1996. Testing models of female reproductive migratory behaviour and population structure in the Caribbean hawksbill turtle, Eretmochelys imbricata, with mtDNA sequences. Molecular Ecology 5(3), 321–328.

 

Bowen, B.W., Bass, A.L., Garcia-Rodriguez, A., Diez, C.E., Van Dam, R., Bolten, A., Bjorndal, K.A., Miyamoto, M.M. and Ferl, R.J. 1996. Origin of hawksbill turtles in a Caribbean feeding area as indicated by genetic markers. Ecological Applications 6(2), 566–572.

 

Bass, A.L. 1999. Genetic analysis to elucidate the natural history and behavior of hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) in the Wider Caribbean: a review and re-analysis. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 3(2), 195–199.

 

Richardson, J.I., Bell, R. and Richardson, T.H. 1999. Population ecology and demographic implications drawn from an 11-year study of nesting hawksbill turtles, Eretmochelys imbricata, at Jumby Bay, Long Island, Antigua, West Indies. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 3(2), 244–250.

 

Kendall, W.L. and Bjorkland, R. 2001. Using open robust design models to estimate temporary emigration from capture-recapture data. Biometrics 57(4), 1113–1122.

 

Frick, M.G., Mason, P.A., Williams, K.L., Andrews, K. and Gerstung, H. 2003. Epibionts of hawksbill turtles in a Caribbean nesting ground: A potentially unique association with snapping shrimp (Crustacea: Alpheidae). Marine Turtle Newsletter 99, 8–11.

 

Glen, F. and Mrosovsky, N. 2004. Antigua revisited: the impact of climate change on sand and nest temperatures at a hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) nesting beach. Global Change Biology 10(12), 2036–2045.

 

Richardson, J.I., Hall, D.B., Mason, P.A., Andrews, K.M., Bjorkland, R., Cai, Y. and Bell, R. 2006. Eighteen years of saturation tagging data reveal a significant increase in nesting hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) on Long Island, Antigua. Animal Conservation 9(3), 302–307.

 

Bowen, B.W., Grant, W.S., Hillis‐Starr, Z., Shaver, D.J., Bjorndal, K.A., Bolten, A.B. and Bass, A.L. 2007. Mixed‐stock analysis reveals the migrations of juvenile hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) in the Caribbean Sea. Molecular Ecology 16(1), 49–60.

 

Sims, M., Bjorkland, R., Mason, P. and Crowder, L.B. 2008. Statistical power and sea turtle nesting beach surveys: How long and when? Biological Conservation 141(12), 2921–2931.

 

Stapleton, S.P., Tilley, D. and Levasseur, K.E. 2010. Monitoring Antigua's hawksbills (Eretmochelys imbricata): A population update from more than two decades of saturation tagging at Jumby Bay. Marine Turtle Newsletter 127, 19–22.

 

Ditmer, M.A. and Stapleton, S.P. 2012. Factors affecting hatch success of hawksbill sea turtles on Long Island, Antigua, West Indies. PLOS One 7(7), e38472.

 

Leroux, R.A., Dutton, P.H., Abreu-Grobois, F.A., Lagueux, C.J., Campbell, C.L., Delcroix, E., Chevalier, J., Horrocks, J.A., Hillis-Starr, Z., Troëng, S., Harrison, E. and Stapleton, S. 2012. Re-examination of population structure and phylogeography of hawksbill turtles in the wider Caribbean using longer mtDNA sequences. Journal of Heredity 103(6), 806–820.

 

Maurer, A.S., De Neef, E. and Stapleton, S. 2015. Sargassum accumulation may spell trouble for nesting sea turtles. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 13(7), 394–395.

 

Reising, M., Salmon, M. and Stapleton, S. 2015. Hawksbill nest site selection affects hatchling survival at a rookery in Antigua, West Indies. Endangered Species Research 29(2), 179–187.

 

Salmon, M., Reising, M. and Stapleton, S. 2016. The evolution of hatchling morphology. Marine Turtle Newsletter 149, 9–12.

 

Kendall, W.L., Stapleton, S., White, G.C., Richardson, J.I., Pearson, K.N. and Mason, P. 2019. A multistate open robust design: population dynamics, reproductive effort, and phenology of sea turtles from tagging data. Ecological Monographs 89(1), e01329.

 

Levasseur, K.E., Stapleton, S.P., Fuller, M.C. and Quattro, J.M. 2019. Exceptionally high natal homing precision in hawksbill sea turtles to insular rookeries of the Caribbean. Marine Ecology Progress Series 620, 155–171.

Maurer, A.S. and Stapleton, S.P. 2021. Inferring organic content of beach sand from color. Caribbean Naturalist 80, 1–6.

Levasseur, K.E., Stapleton, S.P. and Quattro, J.M. 2021. Precise natal homing and an estimate of age at sexual maturity in hawksbill turtles. Animal Conservation 24(3), 523–535.

 

Maurer, A.S., Stapleton, S.P., Layman, C.A. and Burford Reiskind, M.O. 2021. The Atlantic Sargassum invasion impedes beach access for nesting sea turtles. Climate Change Ecology 2, 100034.

 

Maurer, A.S., Gross, K. and Stapleton, S.P. 2022. Beached Sargassum alters sand thermal environments: Implications for incubating sea turtle eggs. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 546, 151650.

 

Maurer, A.S., Dawson, C., Bjorkland, R., Donaldson, A., Stapleton, S.P., Richardson, J.I., Parker, D.M., Balazs, G.H. and Schroeder, B.A. 2022. Satellite telemetry elucidates migratory pathways and foraging areas for hawksbill sea turtles, Eretmochelys imbricata, in the Caribbean. Caribbean Journal of Science 52(1), 126–141.

Maurer, A.S., Seminoff, J.A., Burford Reiskind, M.O. and Stapleton, S.P. 2024. Diverse migratory strategies for a hawksbill sea turtle populationAquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 34(1), e4080.

Maurer, A.S. and Eckert, K.A. 2024. Distributions of the hawksbill sea turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) in the Western Atlantic inferred from satellite telemetry. WIDECAST Technical Report No. 23. Godfrey, Illinois.

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