Gulf Turtle Tracking Project 2011
Emirates Wildlife Society-WWF
Dataset credit
Data provider Emirates Wildlife Society WWF - Marine Research Foundation Originating data center Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT)Project partner This project is implemented by the Emirates Wildlife Society and the Marine Research Foundation. EWS (Emirates Wildlife Society) is a local environmental NGO working at a federal level to promote the conservation of nature in the UAE. To better achieve its goals, EWS has partnered with one of the world's largest and most experienced conservation organization, WWF. Within the UAE, EWS-WWF aims to protect and conserve the unique nature of the region by developing and implementing projects that actively deal with conservation and protection of nature. So far, projects have included the establishment of protected areas, protection of species and habitats and increasing environmental awareness through education programmes. EWS-WWF works with local government and non-governmental organisations including Dubai Municipality, the Environmental Agency-Abu Dhabi (EAD), EPDA in Ras Al Khaimah, EPAA in Sharjah and Fujairah Municipality. The Marine Research Foundation, based in Sabah, Malaysia, was established to further the understanding of marine ecosystems and their associated diverse flora and fauna in Southeast Asia and other Indo-Pacific sites. The Foundation carries out a number of projects related to biodiversity assessment and conservation, and seeks to provide management-oriented solutions to Government administrations and conservationists. Based in Malaysia, MRF runs projects in numerous countries and has a key focus area in the Middle East, with current direct involvement in marine turtle projects in Qatar, UAE, and Oman, and past involvement in projects in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Yemen. Regional project partners include: Iran - Department of Environment Oman - Ministry of Environment and Climate Affairs and Environment Society of Oman Qatar- Environmental Studies Center (Qatar University), Ministry of Environment and Ras Laffan Industrial City United Arab Emirates- Environment Agency Abu Dhabi, Emirates Wildlife Society / WWF, Emirates Marine Environment Group
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Contacts
Role | Name | Organization | |
Primary contact |
Marina Antonopoulou |
Emirates Wildlife Society WWF - Marine Research Foundation |
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Data entry |
Michael Coyne |
seaturtle.org |
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Citation
Antonopoulou M. 2024. Gulf Turtle Tracking Project 2011. Data downloaded from OBIS-SEAMAP (http://seamap.env.duke.edu/dataset/1257) on yyyy-mm-dd and originated from Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT; http://www.seaturtle.org/tracking/index.shtml?project_id=737). Halpin, P.N., A.J. Read, E. Fujioka, B.D. Best, B. Donnelly, L.J. Hazen, C. Kot, K. Urian, E. LaBrecque, A. Dimatteo, J. Cleary, C. Good, L.B. Crowder, and K.D. Hyrenbach. 2009. OBIS-SEAMAP: The world data center for marine mammal, sea bird, and sea turtle distributions. Oceanography. 22(2):104-115.
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Abstract
Marine turtle populations around the globe are threatened through over-harvesting and habitat loss. In the Gulf region, marine turtles have provided food at a subsistence level to fisherman and coastal dwellers since time immemorial. Evidence of this dates back five thousand years! Turtles have also been used traditionally for their fat and meat, and their eggs have fed families dependent on the bounty of the sea. But with increased coastal use and industrialization, and the advent of outboard motors and access to distant markets, the loss of turtles and their eggs has reached a level from which populations are struggling to recover. Turtle eggs, which used to be collected on an occasional, irregular basis, are now collected nearly every single time a nesting female emerges on the beach. Of even greater concern is the increased coastal development - industrialization and urbanization have resulted in severe habitat loss and alteration, and industrialised fisheries, which decimate turtles while at sea, continue to grow. Today, critical measures are urgently needed to safeguard the few remaining turtle nesting sites, their feeding and breeding sites at sea, and their migratory pathways.
The project links together numerous stakeholders, from Government agencies to NGOs to the private sector, and will combine scientific research and monitoring with environment awareness centered on marine turtle protection â€" and bring about regional change â€"positive change resulting in long-term conservation of marine turtles. This project, using capacity building, awareness raising and satellite tracking and monitoring of marine turtles in the Gulf region as operational building blocks, aims to develop a marine turtle conservation action plan through the results of a three year project with the following objectives:
• Develop strategic partnerships amongst government agencies, NGOs and the private sector at both National and Regional levels; • Raise the awareness of marine turtle conservation needs at National and Regional levels; • Elucidate the post-nesting migrations and biology of marine turtles using satellite tracking; • Identify foraging grounds of endangered marine turtles and linkages between nesting and feeding population assemblages; • Share tracking data and findings to relevant authorities and contribute to the development of a regional marine turtle conservation plan; • Integrate these conservation initiatives within international conservation agreements on marine turtles and national programmes.
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Purpose
N/A
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Supplemental information
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References
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Attributes
Overview
This section explains attributes included in the original dataset.
OBIS-SEAMAP restricts the attributes available to the public to date/time, lat/lon and species names/counts only.
Should you need other attributes described here, you are encouraged to contact the data provider.
Attributes described below represent those in the original dataset provided by the provider.
Only minimum required attributes are visible and downloadable online. Other attributes may be obtained upon provider's permission.
Attributes in dataset
Attribute (table column) | Description |
prognum | Program number |
tag_id | PTT ID |
lc | Location class |
iq | Quality indicator |
dir1 | Dir 1 |
nb_mes | Number of messages received |
big_nb_mes | definition not provided |
best_level | Best signal strength in dB |
pass_duration | Pass duration in seconds |
nopc | Number Of Plausibility Checks successful (from 0-4) |
calcul_freq | Calculated frequency |
altitude | Altitude used for location calculation |
sensors | Sensors |
species | Species name |
project_id | STAT Project ID |
lc_filter | Parameters to location filtering |
speed_filter | Parameters to speed filtering |
distance_filter | Parameters to distance filtering |
topo_filter | Parameters to topo filtering |
time_filter | Parameters to time filtering |
angle_filter | Parameters to angle filtering |
life_stage | Life stage of the animal |
gender | Gender of the animal |
wetdry | Wet or dry |
wetdry_filter | Parameters to Wet or dry filterint |
obs_datetime | Date and time (local time zone) |
timezone_h | Time difference from UTC |
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OBIS-SEAMAP ID | 1257 |
Seabirds | 0 |
Marine mammals | 0 |
Sea turtles | 23,710 |
Rays and sharks | 0 |
Other species | 0 |
Non spatial | 0 |
Non species | 0 |
Total | 23,710 |
Date, Begin | 2011-04-13 |
Date, End | 2013-07-12 |
Temporal prec. | 111111 |
Latitude | 19.75 - 28.00 |
Longitude | 50.59 - 71.26 |
Coord. prec. | 3 decimal digits |
Platform | Tag |
Data type | Telemetry location |
Tracklines | YES (ID: 1258) |
if ($show_effort_stat) {
?>
Traveled (km) | 113,291 |
Travel hours | 201,995 |
}
if ($sources != null and $sources != "" and $dataset_id != 427) { // Do not show ESAS
?>
Contr. through | Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool |
}
?>
Registered | 2015-03-24 |
Updated | 2024-02-29 |
Status | Published |
Sharing policy |
Permission required |
Shared with |
SWOT OBIS*
GBIF (via DOI)* * Aggregated summary |
See metadata in static HTML |
See metadata in FGDC XML |
See download history / statistics |
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