Books

Bustard, H. R. (1972). Sea turtles: natural history and conservation (p. 220). London: Collins.

Choi, G. Y., & Eckert, K. L. (2009). Manual of best practices for safeguarding sea turtle nesting beaches. Wider Caribbean Sea Turtle Conservation Network (WIDECAST).

 

News articles

Voon, C. ((2019, January 10). The Life and Legacy of Vietnam’s Sacred Giant Turtle. Atlas Obscura, Retrieved from https://www.atlasobscura.com

Wong, P. T. (2019, August 21). Moving turtle eggs a labour of love as hundreds of volunteers help find nests in Singapore. Today, Retrieved from http://www.todayonline.com

 

Scientific articles

Bradford, B. M., & Israel, G. D. (2004). Evaluating volunteer motivation for sea turtle conservation in Florida. EDIS, 2004(8).

Campbell, L. M., & Smith, C. (2006). What makes them pay? Values of volunteer tourists working for sea turtle conservation. Environmental management, 38(1), 84-98.

Cornwell, M. L., & Campbell, L. M. (2012). Co-producing conservation and knowledge: Citizen-based sea turtle monitoring in North Carolina, USA. Social Studies of Science42(1), 101-120.

Ellis, C. (2003). Participatory environmental research in tourism: A global view. Tourism Recreation Research, 28(3), 45-55.

Jani, J. M., Jamalludin, M. A., & Long, S. L. (2020). To Ban or Not to Ban? Reviewing an Ongoing Dilemma on Sea Turtle Egg Trade in Terengganu, Malaysia. Frontiers in Marine Science6.

Jin, J., He, R., Gong, H., & Wang, W. (2018). Role of risk preferences in explaining the public’s willingness to pay for marine turtle conservation in China. Ocean & Coastal Management, 160, 52-57.

Lo, A. Y., Chow, A. T., & Cheung, S. M. (2012). Significance of perceived social expectation and implications to conservation education: turtle conservation as a case study. Environmental management, 50(5), 900-913.

McDonald, R. I., Fielding, K. S., & Louis, W. R. (2014). Conflicting social norms and community conservation compliance. Journal for Nature Conservation, 22(3), 212-216.

Meylan, A. B., & Donnelly, M. (1999). Status justification for listing the hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) as critically endangered on the 1996 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Chelonian conservation and Biology, 3(2), 200-224.

Mortimer, J. A., & Donnelly, M. (2008). IUCN SSC marine turtle specialist group: Eretmochelys imbricata. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008: e. T8005A12881238. https://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T8005A12881238.en. Downloaded on 07 April 2020.

Nishizawa, H. (2014). Study on Conservation Management of Sea Turtles by Using Genetic Information. Endangered Species Research, 14, 141-148.

Parsons, J.J. (1972). The hawksbill turtle and the tortoise shell trade. In: Études de Géographie Tropicale Offertes à Pierre Gourou. Sorbonne, Paris: Mouton, pp. 45-60.

Ryder, O. A. (2005). Conservation genomics: applying whole genome studies to species conservation efforts. Cytogenetic and genome research, 108(1-3), 6-15.

Shanker, K., & Pilcher, N. J. (2003). Marine turtle conservation in South and Southeast Asia: hopeless cause or cause for hope. Marine Turtle Newsletter, 100, 43-51.

Walker, J. M., Godley, B. J., & Nuno, A. (2019). Media framing of the Cayman Turtle Farm: Implications for conservation conflicts. Journal for Nature Conservation, 48, 61-70.