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Padre Island National SeashoreAn aerial view of the beaches taken probably in the 70s or 80s.
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Padre Island National Seashore
Netting, Satellite Tracking, and Stranding of Green Sea Turtles

The Mansfield Channel is located at the southern end of Padre Island National Seashore, along the south Texas coast. The Mansfield Channel is one of only three direct routes of passage between the Gulf of Mexico and the Laguna Madre. A pair of jetties armor the Gulf of Mexico entrance to the channel. The Mansfield Channel and Laguna Madre provide important habitat for foraging, developing, resting, and migrating sea turtles.

Four sea turtle species, including the green (Chelonia mydas), hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata), Kemp's ridley (Lepidochelys kempii), and loggerhead (Caretta caretta) are documented in the vicinity of the Mansfield Channel. The Mansfield Channel and Laguna Madre are particularly important to juvenile green turtles (Shaver, 1994, 2000, unpublished data), which were once commercially exploited in south Texas. A variety of human activities are conducted at the Mansfield Channel and in the Laguna Madre (dredging, boating, fishing, etc.).

The National Park Service (NPS), National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) needed additional information on sea turtles inhabiting the Mansfield Channel and in the Laguna Madre, in order to afford these threatened and endangered species adequate protection. The objective of this project was to conduct a survey to gather a variety of biological data for sea turtles inhabiting the Mansfield Channel and Laguna Madre. Sea turtles were netted at the Mansfield Channel jetties from 1989 through 1997 and catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) was compared between study months and years. Netting and stranding data were compared (Shaver, 2000). A cooperative study of habitat utilization and movements of juvenile green turtles was undertaken during 1996-1997 using satellite telemetry (Shaver, 2000). A habitat utilization model was developed for green turtles in the Laguna Madre using satellite-tracking and stranding data.  

This research was in cooperation with the NPS, NMFS, USFWS, Western National Parks Association, and Texas A&M University. This research directly met needs identified by the NPS, NMFS, and USFWS and addressed numerous recovery task priority items for the four sea turtle species that occur in the vicinity of the Mansfield Channel. This research determined the species occurrence, seasonality, relative abundance, breeding colonies of origin, and long-term trends of sea turtles at the Mansfield Channel and enhanced understanding of the life history of these species. Results from this work have been and will continue to be used by managers to develop and evaluate regulations and protection measures and improve restoration programs undertaken for these species.

 

White-tailed buck (odocoileus virginianus)  

Did You Know?
The white-tailed deer on the island are not considered the island's largest native mammal, because they are believed to come across the Laguna Madre from the mainland? Coyotes are considered the island's largest native mammal.
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Last Updated: February 16, 2007 at 16:46 EST