SALAMANDRA 54(1) 45–55 15Chelonia February mydas 2018 andISSN Caretta 0036–3375 caretta nesting activity Chelonia mydas and Caretta caretta nesting activity along the Mauritanian coast Feitoumatt Lematt Hama1,2,3,4, Christelle Dyc1, Abdallahi Samba Ould Bilal2,5, Moulaye Mohamed Wagne2,6, Wim Mullie2, Zein El Abidine Ould Sidaty7 & Jacques Fretey1,2 1) Centre de recherches sur les tortues marines – Chélonée, 46260 Beauregard, France 2) Programme Biodiversité, Gaz, Pétrole (BGP), Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), Nouakchott, Mauritania 3) Croatian Institute for Biodiversity, Lipovac I., br. 7., HR-10000 Zagreb, Croatia 4) Biota j.d.o.o., Braće Radića 128/A., HR-43290 Grubišno polje, Croatia 5) Laboratoire d’Ecologie et Biologie des Organismes Aquatique (LEBOA), Institut Mauritanien de Recherches Océanographiques et des Pêches (IMROP), Mauritania 6) Laboratoire d’Etudes des Milieux Marins et Côtiers (LEMMC), Institut Mauritanien de Recherches Océanographiques et des Pêches (IMROP), Mauritania 7) Conservateur Parc National du Diawling, Mauritania Corresponding author: Feitoumatt Lematt Hama, e-mail:
[email protected] Manuscript received: 8 February 2017 Accepted: 28 June 2017 by Philipp Wagner Abstract. Our study on sea turtle nesting along the Mauritanian coast covers the period from June 2010 until October 2015 and provides the first evidence of occasionally highChelonia mydas nest concentrations along the Mauritanian coast. Between 2010 and 2013, sea turtle nests were rarely observed suggesting that nesting events along the Mauritanian coast were sporadic and scattered. In September 2011, a nest of C. mydas on the beach near the Diawling National Park with 36 eggs was translocated to an enclosure at Mouily locality.