|
Dr. Tony Tucker Title: Adjunct Scientist Email: Website: http://www.mote.org/seaturtles
Dr. Tucker is a senior research scientist with the Western Australian Department of Environment and Conservation (DEC). I have been actively involved in sea turtle research since 1979. Research has included projects on loggerhead turtles in Georgia, Florida, Australia and Oman; leatherback turtles in Puerto Rico and French Guiana; hawksbill turtles in Puerto Rico, Haiti, and Australia; olive ridley turtles in Costa Rica, French Guiana, and India; Kemp’s ridleys in Florida; green turtles in Australia and Malaysia; flatback turtles in Australia. Member of the IUCN Marine Turtle Specialist Group and the International Sea Turtle Society. I was a former staff scientist and program manager for the Sea Turtle Conservation and Research Program at Mote Marine Laboratory (MML). The STCRP staff annually trains and coordinates field efforts of 10 college interns and 300+ community-based conservation volunteers. Over three decades MML has monitored 35 miles of Sarasota County beaches that host the largest loggerhead nesting rookery in the Gulf of Mexico. Since 2005, the program has conducted extensive satellite tracking studies, primarily on loggerheads, greens and Kemp’s ridley turtles to quantify seasonal migrations and shared the tracks publicly as educational outreach via www.seaturtle.org. My research interests are centered in life history evolution and conservation biology of vertebrates, with particular interests in how fluctuating environments can influence population dynamics. The approach has two components - (1) development of testable predictions based on life history models, and (2) testing of the predictions with field-collected data by application of modern mathematical and statistical methods. Education
2003 Courtesy Associate Professor, Univ. Florida, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Dept.
Awards
2008 Principal Investigator of the Year, Earthwatch Institute, Australia Publications
Epperley, S. P., A. Nunes, H. Zwartepoorte, L. Byrd, M. Koperski, L. Stokes, M. Braganca, A.D. Tucker, and C. R. Sasso. 2013. The repatriation of a Kemps ridley from the Eastern Atlantic to the Gulf of Mexico. Marine Turtle Newsletter 136: in press. Tucker, A. D. 2010. Nest site fidelity and clutch frequency of loggerhead turtles are better elucidated by satellite telemetry than by nocturnal tagging efforts. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 383:48-55. Tucker, A.D., T. Wibbels, and J. Estes-Layton. 2010. Radar golf balls as a recovery aid for field studies. Marine Turtle Newsletter 129:7-9. Tucker, A. D. 2009. Eight nests recorded for a loggerhead turtle within one season. Marine Turtle Newsletter 124: 16-17. Bordwardt C and A. D. Tucker. 2009. Florida’s sea turtles and light. in T. Posch, A. Freyhoff, and T. Uhlmann (eds). Das Ende Der Nacht: Die Globale Lichtvershmutzung und ihre Folgen. J. Wiley (German Edition). Tucker, T. 2009. Turtle Gaze. Pp. 185-189 in J. K. Reiser (ed.), Courting the Wild: Lover Affairs with Reptiles and Amphibians. Hiraeth Press. Welsh, R. and A. D. Tucker. 2009. Shifting patterns of nocturnal emergence events for nesting loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta). Marine Turtle Newsletter 125: 10-12. Girard, C., A. D. Tucker, and B. Calmettes. 2009. Post-nesting migrations of loggerhead sea turtles in the Gulf of Mexico: dispersal in highly dynamic conditions. Marine Biology 156: 1827-1839. Tucker, T. 2008. Evaluating hazards of boat impact on loggerhead turtles during the internesting period. Pp. 101-105 in G. Mashall (ed.). Proceedings of the 2007 Animal Born Imaging Symposium. National Geographic Society, 298 pp. Yeiser, B. G., J. J. Morris, and A. D. Tucker. 2008. Caretta caretta (loggerhead turtle). Predation. Herpetological Review 39: 343-344. Department: Directorate of Marine Biology & Conservation |
Go Back | Send this page to a friend |
Mote Marine Laboratory has been a leader in marine research since it was founded in 1955. Today, we incorporate public outreach as a key part of our mission. Mote is an independent nonprofit organization and has seven centers for marine research, the public Mote Aquarium and an Education Division specializing in public programs for all ages.








