GBRMPA

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Chapter 15: Vulnerability of marine reptiles in the Great Barrier Reef to climate change

dc.bibliographicCitation.authorsJohnson, J.E.*
dc.bibliographicCitation.authorsMarshall, P.A.*
dc.bibliographicCitation.endpage496en
dc.bibliographicCitation.stpage465en
dc.bibliographicCitation.titleClimate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessmenten
dc.contributor.authorHamann, M.*
dc.contributor.authorLimpus, C.J.*
dc.contributor.authorRead, M.A.*
dc.contributor.corpauthorGreat Barrier Reef Marine Park Authorityen
dc.date.accessioned2012-08-08T06:32:49Znull
dc.date.available2012-08-08T06:32:49Znull
dc.date.copyright2007en
dc.date.issued2007en-US
dc.description.abstractMarine reptiles are an important and well-documented component of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), comprising a single species of crocodile (Crocodylidae), six species of marine turtles (five Chelonidae and one Dermochelyidae), at least 16 species of sea snakes (Hydrophiidae), one species of file snake (Acrochordidae) and one species of mangrove snake (Colubridae). Together these marine reptile species inhabit or traverse through each of the 70 bioregions identified by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority Representative Areas Program . These marine reptile species, with the exception of some of the snakes, have distributions that span large areas of the GBR. Crocodiles, marine turtles, file snakes, mangrove snakes and sea snakes all have life history traits, behaviour and physiology that are strongly influenced by temperature. All are ectothermic except for the leatherback turtle and thus their body temperatures fluctuate with environmental temperature. For egg laying species (crocodiles and turtles), the temperature of the nest determines incubation period, hatching success and hatching sex ratio. Thus as a group they are potentially vulnerable to climate change.en
dc.description.notesThis is Chapter 15 of Climate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessment. The entire book can be found at http://hdl.handle.net/11017/137en
dc.identifier.isbn9781876945619en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11017/547null
dc.keywordsVulnerability assessmenten
dc.keywordsCCAP 07/08en
dc.keywordsCCAP outputen
dc.keywordsresilient GBR ecosystemen
dc.keywordstargeted scienceen
dc.keywordsMarine reptilesen
dc.keywordsturtlesen
dc.keywordsA1en
dc.keywordsB1en
dc.keywordsA1.2en
dc.keywordsA1.3en
dc.keywordsA1.4en
dc.keywordsB1.3en
dc.keywordsB1.4en
dc.keywordsclimate change action plan 1en
dc.keywordssnakesen
dc.keywordscrocodileen
dc.publisherThe Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authorityen
dc.publisher.placeTownsvilleen
dc.relation.connectiontogbrmpaGBRMPA published this itemen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesBook: Climate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessmenten
dc.relation.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11017/137en
dc.subject.apaisReptilesen
dc.subject.apaisEnvironmental impacten
dc.subject.apaisEnvironmental managementen
dc.subject.asfaClimatic changesen
dc.subject.asfaReptiles (aquatic)en
dc.subject.asfaCoral reefsen
dc.subject.asfaEcosystem resilienceen
dc.subject.categoryAnimalsen
dc.subject.categoryPlantsen
dc.subject.categoryEcosystemsen
dc.subject.categoryProcessesen
dc.subject.categoryEconomic valuesen
dc.subject.categorySocial valuesen
dc.subject.categoryClimate changeen
dc.subject.categoryCoastal communitiesen
dc.subject.locationReef-wideen
dc.titleChapter 15: Vulnerability of marine reptiles in the Great Barrier Reef to climate changeen
dc.typeBook section or chapter*
dspace.entity.typePublication

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