2021 State of the Environment Report Marine Chapter – Expert Assessment – State and Trend – Marine turtles

Created 21/12/2025

Updated 21/12/2025

The Marine chapter of the 2021 State of the Environment (SoE) report incorporates multiple expert templates developed from streams of marine data. This metadata record describes the Expert Assessment "State and Trend of marine turtles". A PDF of the full Expert Assessment, including figures and tables (where provided) is downloadable in the "On-line Resources" section of this record as "EXPERT ASSESSMENT 2021 - Marine Turtles"

DESCRIPTION OF TAXONOMIC GROUP FOR EXPERT ASSESSMENT Six species of marine turtles reside in the marine habitats of Australia, predominantly north of 29ºS and south to the extent of boundary currents sweeping the continental coasts. All six species migrate between marine foraging areas and terrestrial nesting sites. Post hatchlings of five species undertake oceanic migrations that take them outside of Australia’s EEZ. The flatback turtle has a life history largely contained within the waters of the Australian EEZ. Each species can be separated into genetically distinct stocks and Australia shares many of these stocks with neighbouring countries. Marine turtles are of great cultural significance to many Indigenous communities. This assessment focusses marine turtles in their nearshore and offshore foraging areas. Nesting beaches are covered in the coasts chapter.

DATA STREAM(S) USED IN EXPERT ASSESSMENT Data derived from formal surveys and published summary documents.

2021 SOE ASSESSMENT SUMMARY [see attached Expert Assessment for full details]

• 2021 • Assessment grade: Very poor-good Assessment trend: Unclear Confidence grade: Limited evidence or limited consensus Confidence trend: Limited evidence or limited consensus Comparability: Grade and trend comparable to 2016 assessment • 2016 • Assessment grade: Poor-good Assessment trend: Unclear Confidence grade: Limited evidence or limited consensus Confidence trend: Limited evidence or limited consensus Comparability: Grade and trend comparable to 2011 assessment • 2011 • Assessment grade: Poor Assessment trend: Stable Confidence grade: Limited evidence or limited consensus Confidence trend: Limited evidence or limited consensus

CHANGES SINCE 2016 SOE ASSESSMENT Since 2016 some foraging populations of marine turtles are now considered very poor rather than poor. This is primarily due to climate change impacts, particularly the feminisation of the northern Great Barrier Reef green turtle population. Hawksbill turtles in the GBR are now considered very poor due to climate change and overseas fishing pressure.

Files and APIs

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Additional Info

Field Value
Title 2021 State of the Environment Report Marine Chapter – Expert Assessment – State and Trend – Marine turtles
Language eng
Licence Not Specified
Landing Page https://data.gov.au/data/en/dataset/10ca11b0-7760-4ba3-b23a-014411268eef
Contact Point
Australian Ocean Data Network
info@aodn.org.au
Reference Period 27/03/2021
Geospatial Coverage
Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors
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Data Portal Australian Oceans Data Network

Data Source

This dataset was originally found on Australian Oceans Data Network "2021 State of the Environment Report Marine Chapter – Expert Assessment – State and Trend – Marine turtles". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://catalogue.aodn.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/csw/dataset/2021-state-of-the-environment-report-marine-chapter-expert-assessment-state-and-trend-marine-tu