Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Project (aggregated per 1-degree cell)

Occurrence Observation
Dernière version Publié par OBIS-SEAMAP le oct. 7, 2025 OBIS-SEAMAP

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Description

Original provider: Jumeirah Group Dataset credits: Data provider Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Project Originating data center <a href='http://www.seaturtle.org/tracking/' target='_blank'>Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT)</a> Abstract: Introduction<br><br>In its current form the project consists of a collaborative effort between Dubai’s Wildlife Protection Office (WPO) and the Jumeirah Group. It evolved from a small-time operation using fish quarantines, available locally for the occasional turtle stranding, but in 2010 alone, over 350 turtles have passed through the project and have been released into the sea. At the outset of the collaboration, the co-chairman of the Marine Turtle Specialist Group was brought in by WPO to ensure that the project followed best practice guidelines in terms of turtle handling, rehabilitation and release protocols.<br><br>Sea turtles received consist of three species, The hawksbill Eretmochelys imbricata, the green Chelonia mydas and the loggerhead Caretta caretta. Although we have received turtles up to 150Kg, by far the majority of the cases we receive are juvenile hawksbills of around 1kg in weight. An ever-increasing local awareness of our project has led to more turtles being received by the project, primarily in the season from January to April, when local waters can be down to 16C. Many of the turtles passing through our hands are due to the efforts of Emirates Marine Environmental Group, TDIC and Dubai Municipality’s Environment Section, as well as contributions from individuals.<br><br>Central to the success of the project is the veterinary work provided by our colleagues at the Dubai Falcon Hospital. Original contributions and protocols for turtle receipt and treatment from Peter McKinney in the late 90’s have subsequently seen contributions from numerous successive veterinarians. Mirjam Hampel has recently left us for work in Europe, but in her time with the project she contributed enormously to the development of the project. Some of our combined work may be viewed in Wildlife Middle East articles, available online. We have also been joined by Valentina Caliendo, who brings to us her experiences of working with cold-stunned individuals in the Mediterranean and Adriatic and most recently Conor Kilgallon who is now offering his veterinary expertise.<br><br>Dubai’s Central Veterinary Research Laboratory (CVRL) provides support in terms of pathology, bacteriology and follow-up blood work.<br><br>Although much of our work is behind closed doors, Jumeirah Group has donated two large penned areas located at Madinat Jumeirah, which are used by the project as pre-release pens. This provides an important chance to observe behaviour of the turtles immediately prior to release. It also provides a first-class interface between the public and the turtles, contributing greatly to local awareness. In excess of 1000 school children visit the project annually and receive guided tours and information on the turtles.<br><br>The release pen is furnished with an artificial reef donated by Amusement White Water. This provides environmental enrichment to the animals within, and allows us to observe the turtle’s forage behaviour.<br><br>The Jumeirah Group has also provided all funding for the eleven satellite tags deployed to date. This provides us with the very exciting opportunity to monitor our turtles post-release. Our 2008 release, Dibba, brought fascinating data back, on its travels from UAE’s East coast to the last known position close to Thailand (8600km). We choose to share all this information via Seaturtle.org in order to contribute to the growing awareness and knowledge of turtle behaviour.<br><br>The day to day project management is from Wildlife Protection Office’s Kevin Hyland and from Burj al Arab’s Aquarium Management Warren Baverstock and David Robinson. This dataset is a summarized representation of the telemetry locations aggregated per species per 1-degree cell.

Enregistrements de données

Les données de cette ressource occurrence ont été publiées sous forme d'une Archive Darwin Core (Darwin Core Archive ou DwC-A), le format standard pour partager des données de biodiversité en tant qu'ensemble d'un ou plusieurs tableurs de données. Le tableur de données du cœur de standard (core) contient 130 enregistrements.

Cet IPT archive les données et sert donc de dépôt de données. Les données et métadonnées de la ressource sont disponibles pour téléchargement dans la section téléchargements. Le tableau des versions liste les autres versions de chaque ressource rendues disponibles de façon publique et permet de tracer les modifications apportées à la ressource au fil du temps.

Versions

Le tableau ci-dessous n'affiche que les versions publiées de la ressource accessibles publiquement.

Comment citer

Les chercheurs doivent citer cette ressource comme suit:

Baverstock W. 2025. Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Project. 1.0.0. Dataset published in OBIS-SEAMAP and originated from Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT; http://www.seaturtle.org/tracking/index.shtml?project_id=687). https://doi.org/10.82144/6750c75e.

Droits

Les chercheurs doivent respecter la déclaration de droits suivante:

L’éditeur et détenteur des droits de cette ressource est OBIS-SEAMAP. Ce travail est sous licence Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC) 4.0.

Enregistrement GBIF

Cette ressource a été enregistrée sur le portail GBIF, et possède l'UUID GBIF suivante : 8267ad5b-16d0-4815-856b-4bdf02f96031.  OBIS-SEAMAP publie cette ressource, et est enregistré dans le GBIF comme éditeur de données avec l'approbation du Ocean Biodiversity Information System.

Mots-clé

Marine Biology; Telemetry; Tagged animal; Occurrence; Observation

Données externes

Les données de la ressource sont disponibles dans d'autres formats

OBIS-SEAMAP Dataset Page https://seamap.env.duke.edu/dataset/802 UTF-8 Interactive map
FGDC Metadata https://seamap.env.duke.edu/dataset/802/fgdc UTF-8 XML
EML Metadata https://seamap.env.duke.edu/dataset/802/eml UTF-8 XML
STAT Project Page http://www.seaturtle.org/tracking/index.shtml?project_id=687 UTF-8 Original web site

Contacts

Warren Baverstock
  • Propriétaire
  • Créateur
  • Personne De Contact
  • Primary contact
Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Project
OBIS-SEAMAP
  • Fournisseur Des Métadonnées
  • Distributeur
Marine Geospatial Ecology Lab, Duke University
  • A328 LSRC building
27708 Durham
NC
US
Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool

Couverture géographique

Oceans

Enveloppe géographique Sud Ouest [3,136, 51,327], Nord Est [30,501, 89,809]

Couverture taxonomique

Scientific names are based on the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS).

Species Caretta caretta (Loggerhead sea turtle), Chelonia mydas (Green sea turtle), Eretmochelys imbricata (Hawksbill sea turtle)

Couverture temporelle

Date de début / Date de fin 2005-02-12 / 2018-06-09

Données sur le projet

Pas de description disponible

Titre Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Project
Financement NA

Les personnes impliquées dans le projet:

Warren Baverstock
  • Propriétaire

Méthodes d'échantillonnage

NA

Etendue de l'étude NA

Description des étapes de la méthode:

  1. NA

Données de collection

Nom de la collection zd_802_1deg
Identifiant de collection zd_802_1deg
Identifiant de la collection parente OBIS-SEAMAP

Citations bibliographiques

  1. Coyne, M. S., and B. J. Godley. 2005. Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT): an integrated system for archiving, analyzing and mapping animal tracking data. Marine Ecology Progress Series: Vol. 301: 1-7. https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v301/meps301001