All references

The list below contains all the information sources referenced in the report. 

Use the search box to find particular references quickly.

To clear the search filter and bring back the full list of references to view, delete any words in the search box and press return or the magnifying glass icon.

  • 451. Pillans, R.D., Fry, G.C., Haywood, M.D.E., Rochester, W., Limpus, C.J., et al. 2021, Residency, home range and tidal habitat use of Green Turtles (Chelonia mydas) in Port Curtis, Australia, Marine Biology 168(6): 88.
  • 452. Hamann, M., Shimada, T., Duce, S., Foster, A., To, A.T.Y., et al. 2022, Patterns of nesting behaviour and nesting success for green turtles at Raine Island, Australia, Endangered Species Research 47: 217-229.
  • 453. Vijayasarathy, S., Baduel, C., Hof, C., Bell, I., Ramos, M.D.M.G., et al. 2019, Multi-residue screening of non-polar hazardous chemicals in green turtle blood from different foraging regions of the Great Barrier Reef, Science of the Total Environment 652: 862-868.
  • 454. Weltmeyer, A., Dogruer, G., Hollert, H., Ouellet, J.D., Townsend, K., et al. 2021, Distribution and toxicity of persistent organic pollutants and methoxylated polybrominated diphenylethers in different tissues of the green turtle Chelonia mydas, Environmental Pollution 277: 116795.
  • 455. Flint, M., Eden, P.A., Limpus, C.J., Owen, H., Gaus, C., et al. 2015, Clinical and pathological findings in green turtles (Chelonia mydas) from Gladstone, Queensland: investigations of a stranding epidemic, EcoHealth 12: 298-309.
  • 456. Limpus, C.J., Miller, J.D., Parmenter, C.J. and Limpus, D.J. 2003, The green turtle, Chelonia mydas, population of Raine Island and the northern Great Barrier Reef: 1843-2001, Memoirs-Queensland Museum 49(1): 349-440.
  • 457. Limpus, C.J. 2008, A biological review of Australian marine turtle species, 2. Green turtle, Chelonia mydas (Linnaeus), Environmental Protection Agency, Brisbane.
  • 458. Coffee, O. and Robertson, K. 2022, Raine Island Recovery Project 2021-22 Technical Report to the Raine Island Scientific Advisory Committee and Raine Island Reference Group, Queensland Government, Brisbane.
  • 459. Coffee, O. and Robertson, K. 2021, Raine Island Recovery Project: 2020-2021 Season technical report to the Raine Island Scientific Advisory Committee and Raine Island Reference Group, Department of Environment and Science, Brisbane.
  • 460. Booth, D.T., Dunstan, A., Robertson, K., Tedeschi, J. and Deakin, J. 2021, Egg viability of green turtles nesting on Raine Island, the world’s largest nesting aggregation of green turtles, Australian Journal of Zoology 69(1): 12-17.
  • 461. Department of Environment Science and Innovation 2024, 'StrandNet Database'. Unpublished report.
  • 462. Bell, I.P., Meager, J.J., Eguchi, T., Dobbs, K.A., Miller, J.D., et al. 2020, Twenty-eight years of decline: nesting population demographics and trajectory of the north-east Queensland endangered hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata), Biological Conservation 241: 108376.
  • 463. Bell, I. and Jensen, M.P. 2018, Multinational genetic connectivity identified in western Pacific hawksbill turtles, Eretmochelys imbricata, Wildlife Research 45(4): 307-315.
  • 464. Barr, C.E., Hamann, M., Shimada, T., Bell, I., Limpus, C.J., et al. 2021, Post-nesting movements and feeding ground distribution by the hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) from rookeries in the Torres Strait, Wildlife Research 48(7): 598-608.
  • 465. Hamilton, R.J., Desbiens, A., Pita, J., Brown, C.J., Vuto, S., et al. 2021, Satellite tracking improves conservation outcomes for nesting hawksbill turtles in Solomon Islands, Biological Conservation 261: 109240.
  • 466. Madden Hof, C.A., Smith, C., Miller, S., Ashman, K., Townsend, K.A., et al. 2023, Delineating spatial use combined with threat assessment to aid critical recovery of northeast Australia’s endangered hawksbill turtle, one of western Pacific's last strongholds, Frontiers in Marine Science 10.
  • 467. Perez, M.A., Limpus, C.J., Hofmeister, K., Shimada, T., Strydom, A., et al. 2022, Satellite tagging and flipper tag recoveries reveal migration patterns and foraging distribution of loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) from eastern Australia, Marine Biology 169(6): 80.
  • 468. Donnelly, A.P., Muñoz-Pérez, J.P., Jones, J. and Townsend, K.A. 2020, Turtles in trouble: the argument for sea turtles as flagship species to catalyse action to tackle marine plastic pollution: case studies of cross sector partnerships from Australia and Galapagos, Br.Chelonia Group 9: 14.
  • 469. Limpus, C.J. 2009, A Biological Review of Australian Marine Turtles, Environmental Protection Agency, Brisbane.
  • 470. Limpus, C.J., Anderson, D., Debets, K., Ferguson, J., Fien, L., et al. 2022, Queensland turtle conservation project: data report for marine turtle breeding on the Woongarra coast, 2021-2022 breeding season, Department of Environment and Science, Queensland Government, Brisbane.
  • 471. McLachlan, N., McLachlan, B. and Limpus, C.J. 2023, Data report for marine turtle breeding on the Wreck Rock coast, 2022-2023 breeding season, Conservation Technical and Data Report 2023 (1):1-24.
  • 472. FitzSimmons, N.N., Pittard, S.D., McIntyre, N., Jensen, M.P., Guinea, M., et al. 2020, Phylogeography, genetic stocks, and conservation implications for an Australian endemic marine turtle, Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 30(3): 440-460.
  • 473. Limpus, C.J., Chaloupka, M., Ferguson, J., FitzSimmons, N.N. and Parmenter, C.J. 2020, The Flatback turtle, Natator depressus, in Queensland: population size and trends, Department of Environment and Science, Brisbane.
  • 474. Limpus, C.J., FitzSimmons, N.N., Anderson, I., Bennett, W., Baldwin, L., et al. 2021, Monitoring of eastern Australian flatback turtle, Natator depressus, breeding populations in the Gladstone region: 2020-2021 breeding season, Department of Environment and Science, Queensland Government, Brisbane.
  • 475. ABC News 2021, Leatherback turtle sightings could indicate return to Queensland shores to nest.
  • 476. Department of the Environment 2023, Dermochelys coriacea — Leatherback Turtle in Species Profile and Threats Database, Department of the Environment, <https://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/sprat/public/publicspecies.pl?taxon_id=1768>.
  • 477. Ligtermoet, E., Gumurdul, J.N., Nayinggul, C. and Baker, R. 2023, The return of the kinga (saltwater crocodile): Population ‘bust then boom’ shapes shifting baselines in Indigenous biocultural knowledge in northern Australia, Biological Conservation 277: 109746.
  • 478. Taplin, L., Brien, M., Beri, P., Booth, S., Mastromonaco, S., et al. 2022, Estuarine Crocodile Population Monitoring in Queensland (1979–2019) Technical Report.
  • 479. Lloyd‐Jones, L.R., Brien, M.L., Feutry, P., Lawrence, E., Beri, P., et al. 2023, Implications of past and present genetic connectivity for management of the saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus), Evolutionary Applications 16: 911-935.
  • 480. Department of Environment Science and Innovation 2024, The genetic structure and connectivity of the estuarine crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) in Queensland 2018–2020 report | Summary and key findings.
  • 481. Congdon, B.C., Erwin, C.A., Peck, D.R., Baker, G.B., Double, M.C. and O'Neill, P. 2007, Vulnerability of seabirds on the Great Barrier Reef to climate change, in Climate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessment The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Townsville, pp. 428-467.
  • 482. Polis, G.A., Sánchez-Piñero, F., Stapp, P.T., Anderson, W.B. and Rose, M.D. 2004, Trophic flows from water to land: marine input affects food webs of islands and coastal ecosystems worldwide, in Food webs at the landscape level, eds G.A. Polis, M.E. Power and G.R. Huxel, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, USA, pp. 200-216.
  • 483. Congdon, B.C., McDuie, F., Miller, M.G.R., Weeks, S.J. and Steinberg, C. 2014, Critical seabird foraging locations and trophic relationships for the Great Barrier Reef, final report to the National Environmental Research Program, Cairns.
  • 484. Commonwealth of Australia Declaration under s248 of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.
  • 485. Saraux, C., Sydeman, W.J., Piatt, J.F., Anker‐Nilssen, T., Hentati‐Sundberg, J., et al. 2021, Seabird‐induced natural mortality of forage fish varies with fish abundance: evidence from five ecosystems, Fish and Fisheries 22: 262-279.
  • 486. Woodworth, B.K., Fuller, R.A., Hemson, G., McDougall, A., Congdon, B.C., et al. 2021, Trends in seabird breeding populations across the Great Barrier Reef, Conservation Biology 35: 846-858.
  • 487. Miller, M., Hemson, G., Toit, J.D., et al. 2023, Refining seabird marine protected areas by predicting habitat inside foraging range - a case study from the global tropics, Preprint.
  • 488. Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority 2012, A Vulnerability Assessment for the Great Barrier Reef, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Townsville.
  • 489. Rogers A, Fuller RA & Amano T 2023, Australia’s migratory shorebirds: Trends and prospects.  final report to the National Environmental Science Program, University of Queensland, Brisbane.
  • 490. Commonwealth of Australia 2015, Wildlife Conservation Plan for Migratory Shorebirds.
  • 491. Hansen, B.D., Fuller, R.A., Watkins, D., Rogers, D.I., Clemens, R.S., Newman, M., Woehler, E.J. and Weller, D.R. 2016, Revision of the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Population Estimates for 37 listed Migratory Shorebird Species, Melbourne.
  • 492. Wauchope, H.S., Shaw, J.D., Varpe, Ø, Lappo, E.G., Boertmann, D., et al. 2017, Rapid climate‐driven loss of breeding habitat for Arctic migratory birds, Global Change Biology 23: 1085-1094.
  • 493. Studds, C.E., Kendall, B.E., Murray, N.J., Wilson, H.B., Rogers, D.I., et al. 2017, Rapid population decline in migratory shorebirds relying on Yellow Sea tidal mudflats as stopover sites, Nature Communications 8: 14895.
  • 494. Murray, N.J., Phinn, S.R., DeWitt, M., Ferrari, R., Johnston, R., et al. 2019, The global distribution and trajectory of tidal flats, Nature 565: 222-225.
  • 495. Ronan, M. 2018, Ramsar Information Sheet: Australia: Shoalwater and Corio Bays Area, Ramsar Sites Information Service, Gland, Switzerland.
  • 496. Weller, D., Kidd, L., Lee, C., Klose, S., Jaensch, R. and Driessen, J 2020, Directory of important habitat for migratory shorebirds in Australia. Prepared for Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment, BirdLife Australia, Melbourne.
  • 497. Clemens, Rogers, Hansen, et al. 2016, Continental-scale decreases in shorebird populations in Australia, Informa UK Limited.
  • 498. Woodworth, B., Congdon, B. and Fuller, R. 2019, Desktop analysis to inform the design for megafauna monitoring within the Reef 2050 Integrated Monitoring and Reporting Program: final report of the shorebirds team in the megafauna expert group, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Townsville.
  • 499. McDougall, A. 2022, Great Barrier Reef and Marine Parks Region, Shorebird Monitoring Strategy 2022-2027, Rockhampton.
  • 500. Rizzo, L.Y. and Schulte, D. 2009, A review of humpback whales' migration patterns worldwide and their consequences to gene flow, Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 89: 995-1002.