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A Local Visitor to
Anna Maria Island, FL.
THE LOGGERHEAD TURTLE |
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Sea turtles," living fossils,
Introduction
In many ways turtles are living fossils that have changed little since they
first appeared about 200 million years ago. Marine forms evolved from
marsh-dwelling species early in the history of turtles. The earliest known
marine turtle fossils are about 150 million years old. Sea turtles, as well as
many other reptiles, flourished during this time of extensive shallow seas.
Turtles adapted to life in the sea by developing a shell and paddled-shaped
forelimbs that enabled them to swim through the water with the motion of a bird.
These changes meant that the head could no longer be pulled into the shell for
protection but a completely roofed-over skull and large body size compensated
for this loss. Today's sea turtles are less specialized and diverse than earlier
forms.
Sea turtles are air-breathing reptiles remarkably adapted to life in the sea. A
streamlined shape, large size and powerful fore flippers enable them to dive to
great depths and travel long distances. Although at home on the ocean, sea
turtles are tied to the land because females must leave the water to lay their
eggs in a sandy beach. .
Sea turtles once roamed the oceans by the millions, but over the past few
centuries the demand for sea turtle meat, eggs, shell, leather and oil has
greatly reduced their number. Populations continue to decline because of the
trade in sea turtle products and the loss of essential habitat. Thousands of sea
turtles drown in shrimp trawls every year and others die from pollutants and
non-degradable debris in the ocean. Concern for the plight of sea turtles is
growing and around the world, conservationists, governmental agencies, public
and private organizations, corporations and individuals are working to protect
sea turtles on nesting beaches and at sea.
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The
Arrival of the Loggerhead Turtles
90 percent of the loggerhead nests found in the United States are in Florida
May 1 through October 31
Water temperature is one of the cues used to
regulate the onset of the nesting season and the interval between nesting
emergences. Sea turtles usually nest at
night but there are notable exceptions. In Florida several instances
of daylight nesting by loggerhead (like This One), green, and leatherback
turtles have been reported, |
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From May 1 through October 31 each
year, Manatee County's beaches become nesting grounds for are most
endangered and threatened Sea turtles
Tracking studies show that female loggerheads about to
nest move into the surf off the nesting beach in the late afternoon and
early evening to wait for nightfall. If a crawl onto the beach does not
result in a successful nest, a female will return to the water and swim
parallel to the beach in the surf zone until another emergence is made or
until sunrise. If nesting is successful, the turtle swims away from the
beach to a shoal area to await dawn. Female sea turtles must leave the
safety of the sea to lay their eggs on land. The arduous process of nesting
takes up to three hours. A turtle must drag her great weight ashore, dig a
nest, using one rear flipper removes a scoop of sand, the other rear flipper
shoots forward to spread sand to the side and front. The egg cavity is
flask-shaped and usually tilted slightly. When the cavity is complete, the
turtle proceeds to lay her eggs, often two or three at a time with brief
rest periods in between. Mucus is often secreted between batches of eggs.
The eggs do not break as they drop into the nest hole because the shells are
leathery and flexible. After deposit roughly one hundred eggs, Theb she must
cover and conceal the nest before returning to the sea. The mother turtle
leaves her eggs to incubate in the warm sand and never visits the nest
again. A female will usually lay several nests during one season and
returning to the same nesting place every 3-4 years |

Turtle Track found after one of our nightly
visitors. |
Here
is a marked nest the kept people from accidentally damaging the nest by
stepping on them. The markers are also used to the turtle watch group can
monitor the safety of the nest and there content easily. |
Temperature affects many phases of a sea turtle's life because, as a
reptile, body temperature is usually within a few degrees of that of the
environment. The importance of temperature begins
Water temperature is one of the cues used to regulate the onset of the
nesting season & also with the eggs in the nest
because temperature is critical to egg development and influences the sex of
the growing embryo. Incubation temperatures above 30°C (86°F) produce mostly
females while temperatures below 28°C (82.4°F) produce mostly males. The
critical time for sex determination occurs during the middle third of
incubation. During this period, oxygen and carbon dioxide levels as well as
other factors also may be influential.
Incubation temperature also determines the number of days eggs take to
hatch. A 1°C (1.8°F) decrease in temperature from shading or excessive rain
may add five days to the incubation period. Incubation temperature can vary
with the location of a nest on the beach and the degree of shading. On
beaches that are fairly uniform fewer females may be produced during the
cooler ends of the nesting season. The
Loggerhead turtles lays between 80 and a hundred eggs in each nest. After
incubating for about two months, the sea turtles hatch, erupt as a group
from the nest at night, and scurry down the beach to the sea. Many years
will pass before the few hatchlings that survive to maturity will be ready
to reproduce. Sea turtles are presumed to return to nest on or near the
beach where they hatched. |
Turtle
tracks can be found throughout the season on the beaches of Anna Maria
Island and Along Most of the coast of Florida. This is all that remains of
the turtle's long night work at the to track is the nest that can be as deep
as 2 feet. as long as turtle had not be startle be beach walker on noise or
light. Sea turtles are heavy, slow and awkward on land and
nesting is exhausting work. The loggerhead, hawksbill and both species of
ridleys move on land with a lizard-like gait in which the diagonal limbs
move simultaneously. The leatherback and green turtle, however, haul
themselves forward by moving the opposite limbs together. The tracks made by
each species of sea turtle are distinctive and can be used to census nesting
activity. |
Hatchlings
Leaving the nest is a group activity that can take several days. The first
turtles to hatch wait quietly until more nestmates are free of their
eggshells. This creates a small air pocket that gives the hatchlings room to
thrash around. The hatchlings do not instinctively dig upward but instead
respond to the movement of nestmates in such a way that the turtles are
brought to the surface. The activity of one turtle triggers the movement of
others so that with sporadic outbursts the hatchlings move as a group
towards the surface. As the ceiling and walls of the chamber collapse from
the thrashing turtles, the floor rises until the hatchlings are near the
surface. Turtles hatching alone or a few at a time have little chance of
escaping from the nest.
the two-inch long turtles
Hatchlings usually emerge from their nest at night in
response to cooling surface temperatures. |
Hatchlings emerge and move quickly toward the moonlit sea.
wrong direction away from the water and
sometime even into the path of a near by traffic.
Finding Water
How hatchlings just out of the nest find the sea has been studied
extensively and is still not completely understood. The most widely accepted
view is that hatchlings have a complex reaction to light that causes them to
move toward the brightest and most open horizon.
As hatchlings move down the beach, the activity of one stimulates others in
the group to move just as it did in the nest This keeps the turtles moving
so they cross the dangerous beach as quickly as possible. Once the
hatchlings reach the water they must negotiate the surf. As the turtle
touches water the crawling motion is replaced by a swimming stroke and the
turtle dives to the bottom and aides the undertow. This diving response
prevents the hatchling from being thrown back onto the beach.
Out to Sea
Hatchling turtles swim continuously for up to 24 hours after entering the
water. This "swim frenzy" gets the hatchings into deeper water and away from
predators. Hatchling green turtles released from a beach were clocked at an
average speed of 1.5 kilometers/hour (1 mile/hour). These turtles maintained
a straight course even after they could no longer see the shore. Leftover
yolk retained in the abdomen provides food during the first few days.
Many hatchlings swim offshore to live for several years in floating seaweed
drifting along the edges of the ocean currents. Eventually the young turtles
take up residence in coastal waters |
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After the
all the turtles have exited the next
a turtle watch volunteer
inspects the remains |
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Here
is a picture
of the discarded shells after they have hatched. |
Do your part to protect our sea turtles.
There are many things we can do to promote the survival of
sea turtles. First, we must remember that we share the beach and ocean with many
other species. Never approach turtles emerging from the sea or disturb or harass
nesting turtles by making noise, shining lights or trying to ride them. To
observe nesting turtles, join one of the many state-permitted "turtle walks"
conducted by experienced guides during the nesting season.•
TURTLE FRIENDLY LIGHTING:
Turn
off, shield or curtain all outside & inside lights that shine on or are visible
from the beach from 9 PM to 7 am. No flashlights, flashbulbs or bonfires on the
beach during nesting or hatching season.
• LEAVE BEACH CLEAN AND FLAT:
Place all trash in proper receptacles; fill In any holes you dig and flatten
your sandcastles. Never leave toys, chairs, floats, towels, etc., on the beach!
These things entrap and obstruct nesting females and hatchings.
•
Do not dispose of
plastic bags in the ocean. Plastic bags in the
ocean very closely resemble a favorite food of sea turtles (jellyfish) and will
cause death or illness to the turtle that eats them.
• DO NOT DISTURB!
If you see someone harassing a sea turtle or poaching a nest, call the local
police or the Florida Marine patrol. Stay clear of marked sea turtle nests on
the beach. DISTURBING A SEA TURTLE NEST IS A VIOLATION OF STATE AND FEDERAL
LAWS.
• BE CAREFUL WHILE BOATING
to avoid collisions with turtles and never throw trash in the water or on the
beach. If you find an injured or dead turtle in Florida, call the Florida
Department of Natural Resources or the Florida Marine Patrol
(1-800-DIAL-FMP).The information gathered may prevent further losses.
•
BEACH CAUTION AFTER 9 PM:
If you are on the beach and see a turtle crawling out of the
Gulf or digging a nest, remain quiet and keep your distance.
Never stop a turtle coming from or returning to the water, or
interfere with hatchlings headed for the water.
•
LOOK BUT DON'T TOUCH ! Cages are placed over nests
on the beach due to lighting problems.
These
cages, controlled by Florida-permitted turtle workers and protected by Federal
law, keep the nests safe.
For Anna Maria Island you can Contact TURTLE WATCH, INC. at
778-5638 569-2173 (pager)
FLORIDA MARINE PATROL, 1-800-DIAL-FMP
When you register your boat, you can purchase a sea turtle
sticker to support the Florida Department of Environmental Protection
Conservation Program.
If YOU find
an injured or dead turtle in
Florida
OR
hatchlings wandering in a road, parking lot, or in directions other than toward
the water, , call the Florida Department of
Natural Resources or the Florida Marine Patrol (1-800-DIAL-FMP).The information
gathered may prevent further losses. call the
Florida Marine Patrol (1-800-DIAL-FMP).
The Bureau of Protected Species Management (BPSM)
coordinates the Department's management activities to ensure protection of sea
turtles. This includes reviewing and conditioning construction permits to
minimize impacts to sea turtles and reviewing and permitting research, rescue,
and nesting surveys for sea turtles. Bureau staff also coordinate efforts
between local governments, nonprofit organizations, and citizens for marine
turtle protection. They can be contacted at (850) 922-4330 or visit their Web
site at http://www.dep.state.fl.us/
If you want to watch a nesting sea turtle,
join an organized turtle walk that has been approved by the Bureau of Protected
Species Management (BPSM). Permitted walks are usually offered from May through
July each year. The leaders of these walks are trained to aid the public in
watching sea turtles without disturbing them. For a list
of organized Walks that you can join, call BPSM at (850) 9224330 or (561)
575-5407. You can also find a list on the BPSM website,
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/
State of Florida Bureau of Protected Species Management
3900 Commonwealth Boulevard MS 245 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3000
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/
If you see a marine turtle being harassed or a nest
being disturbed, call the Florida Marine Patrol (1-800- DIAL-FMP).
The State of Florida's Marine Turtle Protection Program has
two components: The
Florida Marine Research Institute (FMRI) conducts and coordinates
a diversity of sea turtle research projects such as nesting data collection,
stranding and rescue data collection, lighting and hatchling disorientation
research, in-water distribution research and migration research. They can be
contacted at (727) 896-8626
The Federal Endangered Species Act lists all five species of sea turtles in
Florida as either threatened or endangered.
In addition, sea turtles are protected by Florida Statute 370.12, the Marine
Turtle Protection Act. Anyone found harassing a sea turtle or interfering with
the nesting process faces criminal and civil penalties. If you see a marine
turtle being harassed or a nest being disturbed, call the Florida Marine Patrol
(1-800-DIAL-FMP).It is possible that a world in which sea
turtles can not survive may soon become a world in which humans struggle to
survive. If, however, we learn from our mistakes and begin changing our
behavior, there is still time to save sea turtles from extinction. In the
process, we will be saving one of the earth's most mysterious and time-honored
creatures. We might just be saving ourselves too.
picking a Nesting
Beaches with open-water access are usually preferred, especially by larger
sea turtles such as leatherbacks and loggerheads. The beach must be elevated
to prevent flooding by tides, rain or ground water, and the sand must allow
for gas diffusion, yet be moist enough to prevent collapse during digging.
Other factors that may determine whether a turtle nests are beach slope,
sand texture, offshore reefs, dune vegetation, artificial lighting and human
activity on the beach.
The location of a nest is critical to the survival and development of eggs
and hatchlings. If a nest is too near the water, the eggs will become
saturated with sea water and fail to develop. If it is too far up the beach,
roots from vegetation can invade the nest, the nest will be closer to
predators and the hatchings will have a longer way to travel to reach the
water.
Preparing to Nest
As they leave the water and proceed up the beach, many turtles will stop
several times to dig their snouts into the sand. These turtles may be
following a temperature gradient from the cool wet sand near the water to
the warmer dry beach zone to select a suitable nest site.
Making the Nest
Once a nest site has been chosen, the turtle clears the area by sweeping
with all four limbs. A body pit is excavated by digging with the limbs and
rotating the body. This removes the unstable dry sand that would collapse
when dug and allows the egg cavity to be placed farther from the surface.
When the body pit is complete, an egg cavity is dug using the cupped rear
flippers as shovels. The final depth of the egg cavity is determined by the
combined depth of the body cavity and the length of the rear flippers. Sea
turtles alternate their hind limbs as they dig. After one rear flipper
removes a scoop of sand, the other rear flipper shoots forward to spread
sand to the side and front. The egg cavity is flask-shaped and usually
tilted slightly. When the cavity is complete, the turtle proceeds to lay her
eggs, often two or three at a time with brief rest periods in between. Mucus
is often secreted between batches of eggs. The eggs do not break as they
drop into the nest hole because the shells are leathery and flexible.
Two-thirds of the time involved in nesting takes place after the eggs have
been laid as the female covers and disguises the nest. The egg cavity is
filled with sand by raking and packing with the rear flippers. . Lastly, the
body pit is filled, the nesting site concealed with swipes of the front
flippers, and the turtle moves slowly back down the beach and into the surf.
Turtles are not easily disturbed once egg-laying has begun, but turtles
about to emerge from the water, ascending the beach or digging a nest cavity
may turn back if they are bothered by lights or unusual activity. A nest
site may be abandoned if a root, rock or other obstacle is encountered, or
if the sand does not have the correct consistency or moisture content. If a
turtle ascends the beach but fails to nest and returns to the sea without
laying her eggs, it is referred to as a "false crawl."
The interval between successive nests and the number of nests made during a
season varies with the individual turtle, population and species.
Loggerhead, green and hawksbill turtles tend to wait 12 to 15 days before
renesting whereas leatherbacks renest in 9 to 10 days. Ridleys can delay
nesting to synchronize egg laying with other females. Some sea turtles nest
only once or twice during a season while others may nest 10 or 11 times.
Some ridleys nest every year while other populations and species nest every
2 to 4 years.
Egg Production
Sea turtles have been called "egg-laying machines" because of the large
number of eggs they produce. Green turtles in captivity on a high protein
diet can lay up to 1,785 eggs per year and may nest annually for a decade.
Even in the wild most sea turtles will lay several hundred eggs during a
nesting season. The strategy appears to be to lay large clutches as soon as
possible to minimize the time the turtles must spend away from their feeding
grounds. The number of eggs in a clutch is a compromise that reflects many
factors such as the need to compensate for high predation, space limitations
inside the turtle's shell, and the size of the nest cavity.
Social Interactions
Sea turtles for the most part are solitary animals. No parental care is
given to eggs or hatchlings and contact between adults is limited to
courtship, mating and the arribadas of the ridleys. Hatchlings, however,
must work together to escape from the nest and cross the beach and turtles
of all species may be found in large groups of their own kind feeding or
traveling. Except during courtship and mating there appears to be little
interaction between individuals in a group.
Mortality Factors
The large size of adult sea turtles discourages most natural predators, but
hatchlings and young turtles are subject to heavy predation. In undisturbed
populations the loss of many eggs and hatchlings is compensated for by the
large number of eggs laid during a nesting season, low mortality of larger
turtles, and a long reproductive lifespan. Man and his activities, however,
have greatly increased the mortality rate of turtles during all life stages.
As a result many juveniles are not surviving to maturity and adults are not
surviving to reproduce for many years as they would in an unstressed
population.
Natural Causes
Eggs can fail to hatch as a result of flooding from heavy rains or prolonged
tidal inundation, and nests are washed away by beach erosion. Predators also
destroy many nests. In the southeastern U.S. the major predator is the
raccoon. On some South Carolina beaches, raccoons were destroying more than
95 percent of the loggerhead nests until protective measures were taken.
Predators that could not locate or dig up a nest on their own will finish
off a nest discovered by raccoons. Today, active nest protection and raccoon
control programs on many beaches have greatly increased hatchling
production. Nests also are destroyed by ants, ghost crabs,
Hatchlings scurrying down the beach are vulnerable to many of the same
predators that dig up nests for eggs. Once the hatchlings reach the water,
fish lay in wait
Adult turtles may die while nesting if they are caught in drift wood and
vegetation or wedged between rocks, because they cannot crawl backwards to
escape. Turtles at sea are attacked by sharks and killer whales. Sharks are
assumed to be the major natural predator on adults, judging from the number
of nesting turtles with mutilated shells or missing flippers.
fibropapillomas
Many of Florida's green turtles have tumorous warts called :fibropapillomas
on their bodies. These growths are thought to be viral in origin although no
pathogen has been isolated. Some turtles with fibropapillomas die while
others appear to recover. Ibis disease is not new nor is it restricted to
Florida, but there is concern that the percentage of green turtles in
Florida with these growths is increasing. Fibropapillornas were first
reported on a green turtle in the Indian River lagoon in 1982 and now large
numbers of the immature green turtles in the lagoon system are afflicted
with this disease.
introduction
Sea turtles are large animals with long, paddle-shaped foreflippers. The
shell, which consists of an upper and lower part joined on both sides by a
bridge of cartilage, encloses and protects the internal organs. In most sea
turtles the top shell, or carapace, is composed of many bones and covered
with horny scales or scutes. The number and arrangement of these scutes is
one of the ways to tell one kind of turtle from another. Turtles do not have
teeth, but the jaws are shaped to provide crushing, biting or tearing
surfaces appropriate for their diet. Like all reptiles, sea turtles lack
external ears and the eardrum is covered with skin.
Currently, eight species belonging to six genera are recognized. Five of
these species, the leatherback, green, loggerhead, Kemp's ridley and
hawksbill turtles, inhabit the coastal waters of the U.S. including Florida.
The olive ridley is a widespread species but is not found in Florida. The
black turtle of Pacific Mexico was once considered a green turtle but is now
widely accepted as a separate species. Black turtles are occasionally seen
in California. The Australian flatback turtle is found only in Australia and
Papua New Guinea.
Many populations of sea turtles of the same species do not interbreed and so
have evolved independently. Some of these populations may eventually be
designated as separate species. The isolation of groups within a species has
important implications for conservation because protection for one
population will not ensure the survival of others. Sea turtle species share
many characteristics because of their common ancestry and aquatic life, but
each species is unique in its appearance, habitat preferences, diet and
behavior.
Range and Habitat
Sea turtles are found in all but the coldest of the world's oceans, but
nesting is restricted to tropical and subtropical beaches. In the
continental United States, sea turtles are found in the Gulf of Mexico from
Texas through Florida and along the eastern seaboard from the Florida Keys
to as far north as Canada during the warmer months. Nesting has been
recorded from as far north as New Jersey and Virginia and as far west as
Texas, but most sea turtle nesting in the U.S. occurs in the southeastern
states, particularly the Atlantic coast of Florida.
The whereabouts of sea turtles between the time they enter the sea as
hatchlings and their appearance as juveniles or subadults in coastal and
inshore feeding grounds has long been a mystery.
At some point in their development, unknown cues prompt young turtles to
leave the open ocean and take up residence in shallower coastal waters. The
bays, estuaries and nearshore coastal waters of the U.S. east coast and Gulf
of Mexico provide important developmental habitat for juvenile and subadult
sea turtles. Once maturity is reached, most sea turtles move to permanent
feeding grounds or through a series of feeding areas. Many turtles do not
nest near their feeding grounds and so must migrate to nesting beaches.
Sea Turtle Nesting in Florida
Most of the sea turtle nesting in the continental U.S. occurs in Florida.
Leatherback and green turtles rarely nest north of Florida and about 90
percent of the loggerhead nests found in the United States are in Florida.
Florida's east coast from New Smyrna Beach south to Boca Raton accounts for
more than 80 percent of the nesting crawls or tracks observed on the east
coast of the U.S.
South Brevard County has the greatest density of sea turtle nests in Florida
and probably produces more hatchlings per kilometer than any beach in
Florida. On the Gulf coast of Florida, most nesting occurs from Pinellas to
Monroe Counties. |
Scientists recognize seven living species of sea
turtles, which are grouped into six genera.
Migration
The ability of a sea turtle to migrate hundreds (and occasionally thousands)
of miles from its feeding ground to its nesting beach is one of the most
remarkable acts in the animal kingdom. That adult females return faithfully
to nest on the very beach where they were born makes the feat even more
amazing. Research into where and how sea turtles migrate has been a focus of
scientists for decades. The information collected is vital to the
development of conservation strategies for the species. We now know that sea
turtles undergo migration throughout their lives, beginning with the first
frenzied swim as a hatchling.
During its first critical 48 hours,
a hatchling must travel from the beach to a place in the ocean where it is
relatively safe from predators and where it can find food. Many hatchlings
in the Atlantic and Caribbean make their way into Gulf stream currents,
which are filled with floating sargassum weed. There the young turtles find
an ample food supply and few predators. After several years of floating
around the Atlantic, these young turtles are big enough to venture back into
nearshore waters.
Sea turtles typically spend their juvenile years eating and growing in near
shore habitats. Once they reach adulthood and sexual maturity, it is
believed that they migrate to a new feeding ground. It is in this primary
feeding area where adult turtles probably remain throughout their lives,
except during breeding season. When it is their time to mate and nest, both
males and females leave their feeding grounds and migrate to the nesting
beach. This periodic migration will continue throughout their lives.
Navigation
In the open ocean, sea turtles encounter strong currents; they have only
modest vision; they can only raise their heads several inches out of the
water; and there are often no visible landmarks. Even with these
limitations, sea turtles regularly navigate long distances to find the same
tiny stretch of nesting beach. How they do it is one of the greatest
mysteries in the animal kingdom, and finding an answer has been the focus of
generations of researchers. One promising new theory on how sea turtles
navigate suggests that they can detect both the angle and intensity of the
earth's magnetic field. Using these two characteristics, a sea turtle may be
able to determine its latitude and longitude, enabling it to navigate
virtually anywhere. Early experiments seem to prove that sea turtles have
the ability to detect magnetic fields. Whether they actually use this
ability to navigate is the next theory being investigated.
Brief Overview
Sea turtles are large, air-breathing reptiles that inhabit tropicaland
subtropical seas throughout the world. Their shells consist of an upper part
(carapace) and a lower section (plastron). Hard scales (or scutes) cover all
but the leatherback, and the number and arrangement of these scutes can be
used to determine the species.
Sea turtles do not have teeth, but their jaws have
modified "beaks" suited to their particular diet. They
do not have visible ears but have eardrums covered by skin. They hear best
at low frequencies, and their sense of smell is excellent. Their vision
underwater is good, but they are nearsighted out of water. Their streamlined
bodies and large flippers make them remarkably adapted to life at sea.
However, sea turtles maintain close ties to land.
Females must come ashore to lay their eggs in the sand;
therefore, all sea turtles begin their lives as tiny hatchlings on land. R
Sea Turtles and Humans
Sea turtles have long fascinated people and have figured prominently in the
mythology and folklore of many cultures. In the Miskito Cays off the eastern
coast of Nicaragua, the story of a kind “Turtle Mother,” still lingers.
Unfortunately, the spiritual significance of sea turtles has not saved them
from being exploited for both food and for profit. Millions of sea turtles
once roamed the earth’s oceans, but now only a fraction remain.
Reproduction
Only females come ashore to nest; males rarely return to land after crawling
into the sea as hatchlings. Most females return to nest on the beach where
they were born (natal beach). Nesting seasons occur at different times
around the world. In the U.S., nesting occurs from April through October.
Most females nest at least twice during each mating season; some may nest up
to ten times in a season. A female will not nest in consecutive years,
typically skipping one or two years before returning.
Growth & Development
Researchers do not yet know how long baby turtles spend in the open sea, or
exactly where they go. It is theorized that they spend their earliest, most
vulnerable years floating around the sea in giant beds of sargasso weeds,
where they do little more than eat and grow. Once turtles reach dinner-plate
size, they appear at feeding grounds in nearshore waters. They grow slowly
and take between 15 and 50 years to reach reproductive maturity, depending
on the species. There is no way to determine the age of a sea turtle from
its physical appearance. It is theorized that some species can live over 100
years.
Status of the Species
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Sea Turtles: Species Information - Scientific
Classification
Differences Between The Species
Sea Turtle Species of the World
KINGDOM - Animalia
PHYLUM - Chordata
CLASS - Reptilia
Class Reptilia includes snakes, lizards, crocodiles, and turtles. Reptiles
are ectothermic (cold-blooded) and are vertebrates (have a spine). All
reptiles have scaly skin, breath air with lungs, and have a three-chambered
heart. Most reptiles lay eggs.
ORDER - Testudines
Order Testudines includes all turtles and tortoises. It is divided into
three suborders. Pleurodira includes side-necked turtles, Cryptodira
includes all other living species of turtles and tortoises, and
Amphichelydia includes all extinct species.
SUBORDER - Cryptodira
Suborder Cryptodira includes freshwater turtles, snapping turtles,
tortoises, soft-shelled turtles, and sea turtles.
FAMILY - Cheloniidae or Dermochelyidae
Sea turtles fall into one of two families. Family Cheloniidae includes sea
turtles which have shells covered with scutes (horny plates). Family
Dermochelyidae includes only one modern species of sea turtle, the
leatherback turtle. Rather than a shell covered with scutes, leatherbacks
have leathery skin.
GENUS and SPECIES
Most scientists currently recognize seven living species of sea turtles
grouped into six genera.
GENUS SPECIES Common Name
Caretta caretta loggerhead
Chelonia mydas green turtle
Eretmochelys imbricata hawksbill
Lepidochelys kempii Kemp's ridley
L. olivaceaf olive ridley
Natator depressus flatback
Dermochelys coriacea leatherback
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General Behavior
Sea turtles are generally solitary creatures that remain submerged for much
of the time they are at sea. They rarely interact with one another outside
of courtship and mating. Ridleys, however, do come together in massive
groups during their arribadas. But even when large numbers of turtles gather
on feeding grounds or during migration, there is little behavioral exchange
among individuals. Daily Activity Patterns
Turtles feed and rest intermittently during the day.
During nesting season, research conducted in the southeast
United States has discovered loggerheads follow regular patterns between the
nesting beach itself and offshore reefs and other rocky structures. It is
presumed that mating and/or feeding occurs at these offshore areas.
Non-nesting turtles may travel hundreds or thousands of kilometers. A
radio-tagged female loggerhead that nested south of Cape Canaveral spent
September in the coastal waters near where she had last nested. In October
she headed out to sea and followed the currents for 1,500 kilometers (900
miles) in clockwise loop over the deep open ocean. In late November she
moved back into the coastal waters of Florida. An average of 8 of every 12
hours was spent submerged.
Sea turtles sleep at the
surface in the open ocean or on the bottom or under ledges in inshore
waters. Fishermen in the Caribbean catch green turtles by setting nets over
the rocks where the turtles sleep. Hatchlings sleep floating at the surface
with their flippers tucked over their backs. Turtles can rest or
sleep underwater for several hours at a time
but submergence time is much shorter while diving for food or to escape
predators.
Hearing, Sense of Smell and Vision
Sea turtles hear well, particularly at lower frequencies, and their sense of
smell is well developed. They can see well underwater but are nearsighted
when looking through air. Research with hatchling loggerhead and green
turtles has shown that they can see light at wavelengths invisible to
humans. These hatchings were attracted to light in the ultraviolet, violet
and blue-green part of the spectrum and moved away from light in the
yellow-orange range. The response to light is complex and may differ among
species or between hatchlings and adults.
Courtship & Mating
Courtship and mating for most sea turtles is believed to occur during a
limited “receptive” period prior to the female's first nesting emergence.
Afterwards, only females come ashore to nest; males almost never return to
land once they leave the sand of their natal beach. During mating season,
males may court a female by nuzzling her head or by gently biting the back
of her neck and rear flippers. If the female does not flee, the male
attaches himself to the back of the female's shell by gripping her top shell
with claws in his front flippers. He then folds his long tail under her
shell to copulate.
Females observed on the nesting beach after recently mating often have
scratched shells and may be bleeding from where the males' were hooked to
their shells. Copulation can take place either on the surface or under
water. Sometimes several males will compete for females and may even fight
each other. Observers of sea turtle mating have reported very aggressive
behavior by both the males and females. Females may mate with several males
just prior to nesting season and store the sperm for several months. When
she finally lays her eggs, they will have been fertilized by a variety of
males. This behavior may help keep genetic diversity high in the
population.
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Nesting, Incubation and Emergence
Very little in known about why sea turtles nest on some beaches and not on
others. In Florida, loggerheads nest by the thousands on the central east
coast, while identical looking beaches to the north see far fewer
loggerheads. This nesting distribution may reflect conditions that existed
centuries ago, when temperature, beach profiles or the lack of predation
made some areas preferable to sea turtles. Today, humans are affecting the
places where sea turtles nest. Beach erosion caused by coastal armoring and
navigational inlets, artificial lighting and beach renourishment are all
impacting once pristine beaches. These changes will likely have lasting
effects on future nesting patterns. The more we understand about how, where
and when sea turtles nest, the better we will be able to protect their
nesting habitat.
Beach Selection
Most females return faithfully to the same beach each time they are ready to
nest. Not only do they appear on the same beach, they often emerge within a
few hundred yards of where they last nested.
Nesting Behavior
Only the females nest, and it occurs most often at night. The female crawls
out of the ocean, pausing frequently as if carefully scoping out her spot.
Sometimes she will crawl out of the ocean, but for unknown reasons decide
not to nest. This is a "false crawl," and it can happen naturally or be
caused by artificial lighting or the presence of people on the beach. Most
females nest at least twice during the nesting season, although individuals
of some species may nest only once and others more than ten times. Sea
turtles are generally slow and awkward on land, and nesting is exhausting
work.
Constructing the Nest
The female turtle crawls to a dry part of the beach and begins to flings
away loose sand with her flippers. She then constructs a "body pit" by
digging with her flippers and rotating her body. After the body pit is
complete, she digs an egg cavity using her cupped rear flippers as shovels.
The egg cavity is shaped roughly like a tear drop and is usually tilted
slightly.
Laying and Burying the Eggs
When the turtle has finished digging the egg chamber, she begins to lay
eggs. Two or three eggs drop out at a time, with mucus being secreted
throughout egg-laying. The average size of a clutch ranges from about 80 to
120 eggs, depending on the species. Because the eggs are flexible, they do
not break as they fall into the chamber. This flexibility also allows both
the female and the nest to hold more eggs. Nesting sea turtles appear to
shed tears, but the turtle is just secreting salt that accumulates in her
body. Many people believe that while laying her eggs a sea turtles goes into
a trance from which she can not be disturbed. This is not entirely true. A
sea turtle is least likely to abandon nesting when she is laying her eggs,
but some turtles will abort the process if they are harassed or feel they
are in danger. For this reason, it is important that sea turtles are never
disturbed during nesting. Once all the eggs are in the chamber, the mother
turtle uses her rear flippers to push sand over the top of the egg cavity.
Gradually, she packs the sand down over the top and then begins using her
front flippers to refill the body pit and disguise the nest. By throwing
sand in all directions, it is much harder for predators to find the eggs.
After the nest is thoroughly concealed, the female crawls back to the sea to
rest before nesting again later that season or before beginning her
migration back to her feeding ground. Once a female has left her nest, she
never returns to tend it.
Incubation
Incubation takes about 60 days, but since the temperature of the sand
governs the speed at which the embryos develop, the hatching period can
cover a broad range. Essentially, the hotter the sand surrounding the nest,
the faster the embryos will develop. Cooler sand has a tendency to produce
more males, with warmer sand producing a higher ratio of females.
Emerging from the Nest
Unlike baby alligators, which are liberated from their nest by their mother,
sea turtle hatchlings must do it all themselves. To break open their shells,
hatchlings use a temporary, sharp egg-tooth, called a "caruncle." The
caruncle is an extension of the upper jaw that falls off soon after birth.
Digging out of the nest is a group effort that can take several days.
Hatchlings usually emerge from their nest at night or during a rainstorm
when temperatures are cooler. Once they decide to burst out, they erupt from
the nest cavity as a group. The little turtles orient themselves to the
brightest horizon, and then dash toward the sea. If they don't make it to
the ocean quickly, many hatchlings will die of dehydration in the sun or be
caught by predators like birds and crabs. Once in the water, they typically
swim several miles off shore, where they are caught in currents and seaweed
that may carry them for years before returning to nearshore waters. There
are many obstacles for hatchlings in the open ocean. Sharks, big fish and
circling birds all eat baby turtles, and they die after accidentally eating
tar balls and plastic garbage. The obstacles are so numerous for baby
turtles that only about one in 1,000 survives to adulthood.
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|
Sea Turtles are Endangered or Threatened Species
Sea turtles in Florida are protected through
Florida
Statutes, Chapter 370, and by the United States Endangered
Species Act of 1973. Of those species that nest on Broward's beaches, green
and leatherback sea turtles are listed officially as endangered and the
Florida population of loggerhead sea turtles are considered threatened.
Briefly, these laws state that: "No person may take, harass, harm, pursue,
hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture or attempt to engage in any such
conduct to marine turtles, turtle nests, and/or turtle eggs." Any person who
knowingly violates any provision of the act may be assessed civil penalties
up to $25,000 or a criminal penalty up to $50,000 and up to one year
imprisonment.
Sea Turtle Nesting Behavior
The nesting season in Broward County begins in early April each year with
loggerheads first and then greens in May and June. Leatherbacks are less
predictable and can nest as early as February or March. nesting continues
through the end of August and early September, with the peak season for
loggerheads being the end of June and the beginning of July. With very rare
exceptions, the nests are deposited at night.
If undisturbed, the females leave the water and crawl up the beach to a
point well above the high tide line. There, using her rear flippers, she
digs an egg chamber cavity about 8 inches in diameter and about 18 inches
deep. After resting briefly, she then fills the hole with about 100
(sometimes more) golfball-sized eggs, gently covers the eggs with sand and
then spreads sand over a wide area with her front flippers to obscure the
exact location of the chamber. She then leaves the nest site and reenters
the water.
Since adult sea turtles do not nurture their hatchlings, the female never
sees the nest site again. A single female may nest several times during a
season and then not nest again for one or two years. Sometimes, (about 45%
of the time), the female exits the water, crawls the beach for long
distances and reenters the water without digging a nest. These are called
"false crawls" and usually occur because the turtle was disturbed or it
could not find a "good" nest site. The crawl tracks left on the beach are
always made by female sea turtles and they resemble marks left by a tractor
tire. Male sea turtles never leave the ocean.
Hatchling Sea Turtles
Incubation of the nests takes about 50-55 days. After this period, the
hatchlings emerge from the nest en masse and, using various environmental
and inherited cues, quickly migrate to the water's edge. If artificial
lights are lighting the beach, the hatchlings will be disoriented, travel in
the wrong direction, and possibly never make it to the water.
Once in the water the hatchlings swim directly out to sea, facing a perilous
struggle to survive to adulthood. The best scientific estimates available
indicate that only one in 1,000 to 10,000 hatchlings will survive (anywhere
from 12 - 50 years) to become a reproducing and nesting adult sea turtle.
The maximum age of adult turtles is unknown, but some have been kept in
captivity longer that fifty years.
Sea Turtle Journey : The Story of a Loggerhead Turtle
by Lorraine A. Jay, Katie Lee (Illustrator), Peter Thomas (Narrator),
Lorraine A. Joy |
Classification
Sea turtles belong to a group of animals known as Reptilia, which includes
snakes, lizards, crocodiles and alligators, even dinosaurs. Reptiles are
cold-blooded vertebrates, usually laying white, "leathery" eggs. They have
an external covering of scales or horny plates. They breathe by means of
lungs; the heart has three chambers, though crocodiles have four.
Sea turtles have existed for more than 175 million years. Today, there are
seven species of sea turtles in the world, belonging to five genera. Five of
the seven species occur in Florida waters. Each has particular dietary and
habitat requirements, as well as behavioral patterns.
Among sea turtles found in United States waters, the Family Cheloniidae
(hard-shell turtles) includes the green, hawksbill, loggerhead and ridley
turtles. Leatherbacks, with a rubbery "skin," are the only living members of
the Family Dermochelyidae.
Description
Sea turtles resemble land turtles in form, but their limbs are swimming
paddles rather than walking legs and they cannot withdraw into their shells.
Feeding
Problems of survival begin when the eggs are deposited in the nest. If the
nest site is not carefully chosen,
it may be flooded by the tides and the eggs will "drown" in the salt water.
Obstructions such as seawalls may cause the turtle to select an unfavorable
nesting site; beach erosion can also destroy nests.
Raccoons often ravage a nest
even before the female returns to sea. On some South Carolina beaches, more
than 95% of the loggerhead nests were destroyed by raccoons until protective
measures were taken. At Cape Canaveral, Florida, raccoons took a similar
toll until the nests were protected.
When the eggs hatch, the journey from the nest to the sea can be hazardous.
Hatching occurs over a period of a day or two. The young sense the heat of
the surface sand and lie quietly until the temperature cools, so they
usually leave the nest at night or on a cloudy day after a rain.
Ghost crabs and birds stand
by to feed on the young turtles and, once in the water, various fishes await
the vulnerable young prey.
Another hazard to turtle eggs and hatchlings is
normal beach traffic - people
and beach- cleaning equipment. Such traffic may crush the eggs in the nest
or compact the sand so the hatchlings cannot emerge.
Hatchlings head for the sea under natural conditions, the light reflected
from the surf being a beacon they readily follow. However,
beachfront development has
flooded the coastline with streetlamps, security lighting and building
illumination, all of which distract the hatchlings so they never reach their
goal. They become tangled in vegetation, lost among the dunes or in peril on
the highways. Most die from desiccation.
The mortality rate of juveniles at
sea is undoubtedly high for they are food for a wide variety of fish. It has
been estimated that of the 100 eggs originally deposited in a nest, perhaps
only one or two will survive to maturity.
Regulations
All sea turtle species are considered to be threatened or endangered under
the laws of the United States. In
1969, the Lacey Act was amended to place restrictions on the
importation of sea turtles. In the same year, the Endangered Species Act was
passed, placing bans on the importation of species listed as endangered.
The 1973 Endangered Species Act
replaced the old act, making it illegal to "harass, harm, pursue,
hunt, shoot, wound, kill, capture or collect endangered species." The Act
also provided for acquisition and/or protection of turtle nesting habitats
and for establishing marine sanctuaries for turtles. Without a permit, it is
illegal to import, sell or transport turtles or their products in interstate
or foreign trade. The National Marine Fisheries Service has jurisdiction
over sea turtles in the water; the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
jurisdiction on land.
In cooperation with federal agencies, the
Florida Department of Natural
Resources administers the sea turtle programs of the state. Many
organizations and private citizens are permitted through FDNR to protect and
conserve sea turtles through beach patrols, nest protection and, in some
cases, moving nests to safer areas.
Sea turtles are often killed when they become entrapped in shrimp nets or
similar fishing gear. The National Marine Fisheries Service and others have
developed a Turtle Excluder Device
(TED) to permit escape of turtles and other large animals while
retaining the catch of shrimp. A TED is now required of shrimpers fishing in
many waters where incidental catch of sea turtles is known to be a problem.
Commercial fishermen should contact local enforcement agencies for updated
information regarding TED requirements and availability.
Farming Potential
At one time abundant in Florida and Caribbean waters, sea turtles were
heavily harvested when Columbus opened the New World to exploration and
trade. As early as 1790, the numbers of green turtles in the Caribbean began
alarming declines as the demand for turtle products grew all over the world.
The potential for farming sea turtles drew great interest. That interest has
persisted through the years.
At this time, scientists and conservation organizations throughout the world
do not consider "farming" to be effective or feasible. The issues are
complex and the major concern is for the survival of a healthy, breeding,
natural population. All sea turtle
products are banned in the United States, and numerous regulations
protect sea turtles, their eggs and habitats. Many other countries are also
trying, with varying degrees of success, to protect turtles. Until the time
when sea turtle populations are stabilized in the natural environment,
"farming" and "ranching" will remain controversial subjects.
Economic Importance/Historical Highlights
For centuries, sea turtles were a valuable commercial resource. In 1503,
when Columbus was on his last voyage, he discovered the Cayman Islands. Sea
turtles were so numerous he named the islands Las Tortugas. Early sailors
captured turtles, tied them down on their backs and kept them alive on board
ship. They were a welcome source of fresh meat on long voyages. Captain
William King, aboard the Solomon, wrote in 1592 that "Two of these
(turtles), with the eggs, fed ten men for a day." By the mid 1600's, the
Cayman Islands became a major provisioning port.
Tortoise-shell was processed into combs, bracelets and earrings for
fashion-conscious Europeans. Eating turtle flesh was thought to restore a
male's "youthful vigor and guarantee a long life." A doctor writing in 1756
stated that a diet of green turtle meat would also cure "all manner of skin
infections." To this day, many Caribbean cultures erroneously consider
turtle eggs to be an aphrodisiac and routinely poach turtle nests for their
supplies.
Calipee is a gelatinous material from the belly-plate of green turtles. It
was used to make clear turtle soup that was greatly admired. Turtles are
also a source of oil and leather.
The carapace or "shell" of a turtle is a popular wall decoration. In many
parts of the world, turtles are an important part of the native diet and
beliefs. There are major efforts by more developed countries, however, to
reduce or eliminate the harvest of turtles and turtle eggs to ease the
stress on threatened populations. It is a difficult task. As one author
noted, "Conservation is a reflection of an affluent society." Underdeveloped
societies must still rely on available resources, even though those
resources are often endangered.
With research, public understanding of the problem, strong legislation and
enforcement there is hope for survival of these ancient animals.
Underdeveloped countries, too, can further protect turtles by developing
alternate, readily available food sources and teaching their people wise
conservation practices. It will be a long-term and costly battle, requiring
international cooperation and understanding. After surviving more than 175
million years, sea turtles must rely on the immediate action and concern of
people to assure their future.
Glossary
carapace: the upper shell covering a turtle.
Cheloniidae:
sea turtles enclosed in bony plates, such as loggerhead turtles; from a
Greek word meaning "tortoise."
costal shields/plates:
the plates on either side of the central row of shields or plates; "costal"
relates to the ribs; plate or shield relates to a flat, hard scale or
covering.
Dermochelyidae:
"skin-covered" turtle, such as the leatherback.
desiccation:
drying out.
genus, genera (plural):
group of similar species, each species having some characteristics in common
with the others.
plastron:
under surface of the turtle's shell. sargassum, sargassum weed:
a bushy brown alga (sea weed) with many small leaf-like parts and berry-like
floats.
serrate:
notched, erose.
species:
group of animals with the least number of differences, generally capable of
interbreeding.
Selected References |
Sea Turtles.
Sea turtles belong to a group of animals known as Reptilia, which includes
snakes, lizards, crocodiles and alligators, even dinosaurs. Reptiles are
cold-blooded vertebrates, usually laying white, "leathery" eggs. They have
an external covering of scales or horny plates. They breathe by means of
lungs; the heart has three chambers, though crocodiles have four.
Sea turtles have existed for more than 175 million years. Today, there are
seven species of sea turtles in the world, belonging to five genera. Five of
the seven species occur in Florida waters. Each has particular dietary and
habitat requirements, as well as behavioral patterns.
Among sea turtles found in United States waters, the Family Cheloniidae
(hard-shell turtles) includes the green, hawksbill, loggerhead and ridley
turtles. Leatherbacks, with a rubbery "skin," are the only living members of
the Family Dermochelyidae.
Description
Sea turtles resemble land turtles in form, but their limbs are swimming
paddles rather than walking legs and they cannot withdraw into their shells.
Distribution and Habitat
Sea turtles, obviously, make their homes in the world oceans. Rarely do they
go ashore. Female turtles, however, must return to beaches for the ancient
ritual of egg laying.
The remains of loggerhead turtles have been found under geological
formations tens of thousands of years old in the Caribbean. Today, Atlantic
loggerheads are distributed throughout the western Atlantic Ocean and Gulf
of Mexico, from Newfoundland to Argentina and occasionally along European
Atlantic shores and the Mediterranean Sea.
Green turtles are a more tropical species. Although they may be found in the
Atlantic from New England to Argentina, they frequent Gulf of Mexico and
Caribbean waters.
Hawksbill turtles are even more restricted to the tropics than green sea
turtles, but they occasionally range from Massachusetts to Brazil. Kemp's
ridley turtles are found in the Gulf of Mexico and along the eastern coast
of the United States as far north as Nova Scotia. Juvenile Kemp's found in
European waters appear to be waifs. Leatherbacks range throughout the
Atlantic, from Newfoundland to Argentina, and occasionally the Mediterranean
Sea.
In general, sea turtles found in Florida may range throughout the waters of
northeastern United States in warmer months. Loggerheads and leatherbacks
are frequently seen off the northeast coast of the United States. Juvenile
Kemp's ridleys are regularly sighted in the Chesapeake Bay, Long Island
Sound and in the vicinity of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Greens and hawksbills
are rarely seen outside of tropical or subtropical areas.
In some places, green sea turtles are known to bask, crawling onto beaches
or rocks to rest in the sun. Off the coast of Australia, green turtles were
observed "piled up like rocks," basking; northwest of the Hawaiian Islands,
basking green turtles are often seen during the breeding season. The
activity is thought to have been more common in the past, when humans were
less likely to disturb them.
As air-breathing reptiles with lungs, sea turtles must surface periodically.
They are, however, capable of remaining submerged for extended periods. .
Life History
Sea turtles nest on beaches, depositing eggs in a pit dug with the hind
flippers. In approximately two months, hatchlings emerge from the nest and
scramble to the sea. Little is known of the first year or so of growth and
development. Biologists often refer to this interval as "the lost year."
Evidence is growing, however, that many hatchlings get caught up in "rafts"
of floating sargassum weeds. The young turtles are thought to spend quite a
while in these habitats, moved about the ocean currents.
Sea turtles appear to lead rather solitary lives at sea, except when they
congregate off nesting beaches, where they mate in the near shore waters.
The female goes ashore to lay her eggs and the cycle begins again. The
scenario is similar for each species, with minor variations.
In the United States, loggerhead
turtles nest from April through August from Virginia to Florida. They
are the most common nesting turtle in the U.S.; the U.S. nesting population
is the second largest in the world. Florida has the largest percentage of
loggerhead nesting with approximately
30,000 nests each year.
Between 300 to 700 green turtle nests and 50 to 80 leatherback nests
are also recorded annually on the state's east coast; hawksbills rarely nest
there.
Loggerhead nesting occurs on sandy
beaches above the high tide line. If the nest is flooded by the tide,
the eggs will "drown" in salt water. The female crawls ashore at night, digs
a shallow pit and then makes a nest cavity where she deposits the eggs. The
eggs are white, soft and round, measuring about 1-3/4 inches. A clutch
averages about 100 eggs. Once the eggs are deposited, the rear flippers fill
and cover the nest with sand and the turtle returns to the sea. The female
may nest two or more times a season, about 14 days apart. The age of sexual
maturity is not known with certainty. Loggerheads are thought to be mature
when the carapace length is greater than 30 inches, which may be 13 to 15
years of age. Some people, however, believe that sexual maturity in nature
may be as much as 20 to 30 years of age. In captivity, a well-fed loggerhead
may reach maturity at seven years, but growth in the wild is much slower.
|
When
hatchlings scramble from the nest, they instinctively head for the water,
where they swim seaward. They are thought to become entrained in oceanic
currents and disbursed. There is evidence that young turtles drift with
rafts of sargassum weed where they find food and shelter.
The temperature at which green turtle eggs are incubated is a factor in
determining the sex of the hatchlings. In the laboratory, "cool" nests
incubated at a constant 82.5 F (28 C) or less produce almost no females
(0-10%) , while "warm" nests at 85 F (29.5 C) produce almost all females
(95-100%).
Sexual maturity of green turtles in nature is estimated variably at 15 to 30
years of age.
Sea turtles live in saltwater without having to drink freshwater; excess
salt is excreted through tear ducts. They have no teeth; the jaws are
modified for crushing, biting or tearing. Sea turtles have good underwater
vision and are able to see color and ultra-violet light. Their vision in
air, however, is poor. They do not have external ears, but middle and inner
ears which detect low frequency sounds. All of them seem to have a good
sense of smell.
As air-breathing reptiles with lungs, sea turtles must surface to breathe.
When they are active, they must breathe often, but at rest their respiration
slows.
Migration
Sea turtles are long-distance travelers, roaming the oceans of the world. It
is not aimless wandering, however, but apparently deliberate travel to
specific areas. |
Due to gravity and their large size, sea turtles are
unable to retract their extremities into their shell. Instead
loggerheads must rely on strong swimming ability, size, and a protective
outer shell to escape predation. Loggerheads normally weigh 170 to 315
pounds and attain a length of 31 to 49 inches. These immense proportions
predictably deter most predators, leaving only large carnivorous animals,
such as sharks and humans, with the ability to catch and eat these well
adapted sea turtles.
(Sea Turtles have front and rear pairs of
paddle-like flippers. The
front flippers, once thought to be used like oars for swimming, function
similar to the wings of an
airplane-utilizing layers
of water to provide lift and propulsion through the ocean. )
s.
http://www.graysreef.nos.noaa.gov/articles/art5.html
|
Thousands of sea turtles call Florida home
Of the eight
species of sea turtles worldwide, five are found in Florida.
Sea turtles deposit from 40,000 to 70,000 nests in Florida annually, which
makes this the most important nesting area in the United States. Sea turtles
most commonly seen in Florida are loggerheads, greens, and leatherbacks.
Sea turtles have a low streamlines shell and powerful, oversized front
limbs, adaptations that enable them to swim for great distances. They have
no teeth but use their jaws to crush and tear food. the smallest sea turtle,
the ridley, weighs 75-100 pounds when mature while adults of the largest
species, the leatherback, can weigh almost 1,300 pounds and may be eight
feet in length.
Sea turtles spend most of their day feeding or sleeping under reef ledges or
in the open ocean. Some travel hundreds or thousands of miles to feed or
nest.
Distribution and Habitat
Sea turtles, obviously, make their homes in the world oceans. Rarely do they
go ashore. Female turtles, however, must return to beaches for the ancient
ritual of egg laying.
Green turtles are a more tropical species. Although they may be found in the
Atlantic from New England to Argentina, they frequent Gulf of Mexico and
Caribbean waters.
Hawksbill turtles are even more restricted to the tropics than green sea
turtles, but they occasionally range from Massachusetts to Brazil. Kemp's
ridley turtles are found in the Gulf of Mexico and along the eastern coast
of the United States as far north as Nova Scotia. Juvenile Kemp's found in
European waters appear to be waifs. Leatherbacks range throughout the
Atlantic, from Newfoundland to Argentina, and occasionally the Mediterranean
Sea.
In general, sea turtles found in Florida may range throughout the waters of
northeastern United States in warmer months. Loggerheads and leatherbacks
are frequently seen off the northeast coast of the United States. Juvenile
Kemp's ridleys are regularly sighted in the Chesapeake Bay, Long Island
Sound and in the vicinity of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Greens and hawksbills
are rarely seen outside of tropical or subtropical areas.
In some places, green sea turtles are known to bask, crawling onto beaches
or rocks to rest in the sun. Off the coast of Australia, green turtles were
observed "piled up like rocks," basking; northwest of the Hawaiian Islands,
basking green turtles are often seen during the breeding season. The
activity is thought to have been more common in the past, when humans were
less likely to disturb them.
As air-breathing reptiles with lungs, sea turtles must surface periodically.
They are, however, capable of remaining submerged for extended periods. A
leatherback fitted with a time-depth recorder made a dive of more than 3,300
feet off the Virgin Islands. In other studies over a ten-day period, the
average depth of all dives of a leatherback was 222 feet and in some cases
the animal was submerged as long as 27.8 minutes. The tagged female
leatherback averaged 2.7 dives per hour during daylight and 3.6 dives each
hour (average) at night.
Life History
Sea turtles nest on beaches, depositing eggs in a pit dug with the hind
flippers. In approximately two months, hatchlings emerge from the nest and
scramble to the sea. Little is known of the first year or so of growth and
development. Biologists often refer to this interval as "the lost year."
Evidence is growing, however, that many hatchlings get caught up in "rafts"
of floating sargassum weeds. The young turtles are thought to spend quite a
while in these habitats, moved about the ocean currents.
Sea turtles appear to lead rather solitary lives at sea, except when they
congregate off nesting beaches, where they mate in the near shore waters.
The female goes ashore to lay her eggs and the cycle begins again. The
scenario is similar for each species, with minor variations.
In the United States, loggerhead turtles nest from April through August from
Virginia to Florida. They are the most common nesting turtle in the U.S.;
the U.S. nesting population is the second largest in the world. Florida has
the largest percentage of loggerhead nesting with approximately 30,000 nests
each year. Between 300 to 700 green turtle nests and 50 to 80 leatherback
nests are also recorded annually on the state's east coast; hawksbills
rarely nest there.
Loggerhead nesting occurs on sandy beaches above the high tide line. If the
nest is flooded by the tide, the eggs will "drown" in salt water. The female
crawls ashore at night, digs a shallow pit and then makes a nest cavity
where she deposits the eggs. The eggs are white, soft and round, measuring
about 1-3/4 inches. A clutch averages about 100 eggs. Once the eggs are
deposited, the rear flippers fill and cover the nest with sand and the
turtle returns to the sea. The female may nest two or more times a season,
about 14 days apart. The age of sexual maturity is not known with certainty.
Loggerheads are thought to be mature when the carapace length is greater
than 30 inches, which may be 13 to 15 years of age. Some people, however,
believe that sexual maturity in nature may be as much as 20 to 30 years of
age. In captivity, a well-fed loggerhead may reach maturity at seven years,
but growth in the wild is much slower.
When hatchlings scramble from the nest, they instinctively head for the
water, where they swim seaward. They are thought to become entrained in
oceanic currents and disbursed. There is evidence that young turtles drift
with rafts of sargassum weed where they find food and shelter. The duration
of this oceanic phase is unknown, but it appears to be longer for
loggerheads than for green and hawksbill turtles.
As loggerheads mature, they travel and forage through near shore waters
until the breeding season, when they return to the nesting beach areas. The
majority of mature loggerheads appear to nest on a two or three year cycle.
Green turtle life histories are basically similar. They nest mainly from
July through September in the West Indies, Mexico, South and Central
America, and on the east coast of Florida.
Green turtles nest on Ascension Island in the south central Atlantic Ocean
from January through April. They then head westward to Brazilian waters,
traveling more than 1500 miles to favored feeding grounds.
The temperature at which green turtle eggs are incubated is a factor in
determining the sex of the hatchlings. In the laboratory, "cool" nests
incubated at a constant 82.5 F (28 C) or less produce almost no females
(0-10%) , while "warm" nests at 85 F (29.5 C) produce almost all females
(95-100%).
Sexual maturity of green turtles in nature is estimated variably at 15 to 30
years of age.
Leatherbacks nest from February through July in the West Indies, Central and
South America and Florida.
Leatherback Turtle
The endangered leatherback turtle is the largest and most active of the sea
turtles. They travel thousands of miles, dive thousands of feet deep, and
venture into much colder water than any other kind of sea turtle. Up to
eight feet in length, these huge turtles have a rubbery dark shell marked by
seven narrow ridges that extend the length of the back. Remarkable,
leatherbacks feed on jellyfish and soft-bodied animals that would appear to
provide very little nutrition for such huge animals. Ingestion of plastic
bags and egg collecting are reasons for mortality and population declines.
About 100 to 200 leatherback nests are recorded in Florida each year.
Leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea)
Leatherbacks are also endangered, but a few nest on the east coast of
Florida each year. The leatherback is the champion of sea turtles. It grows
the largest, dives the deepest, and travels the farthest of all sea turtles.
Mature leatherbacks typically reach about 4 to 8 feet in length and weigh
from 650 to 1,300 pounds. The largest leatherback ever recorded was almost
10 feet (3 m) from the tip of its beak to the tip of its tail and weighed in
at 2,019 pounds (916 kg). The leatherback is the only sea turtle that lacks
a hard shell. It is named for its large, elongate shell which is composed of
a layer of thin, tough, rubbery skin, strengthened by thousands of tiny bone
plates. Seven narrow ridges run down the length of the carapace, which is
typically black with many white spots. The lower shell is whitish to black
and marked by 5 ridges. The body of a leatherback is barrel shaped, tapering
at the rear to a blunt point. With this streamlined body shape and the
powerful front flippers, a leatherback can swim thousands of miles over open
ocean and against fast currents.
Leatherbacks feed almost exclusively on jellyfish. It is remarkable that
this large, active animal can survive on a diet of jellyfish, which are
composed mostly of water and appear to be a poor source of nutrients. Young
leatherbacks in captivity can eat twice their weight in jellyfish each day.
Leatherbacks approach coastal waters only during breeding season. Nesting
occurs throughout the Caribbean, on the northern coast of South America, the
Pacific Coast of Central America, and on the east coast of Florida. Nesting
season runs from March through July. Leatherbacks nest every 2 to 3 years,
laying 6 to 9 egg clutches in a nesting season. Each clutch contains
approximately 80 fertilized eggs the size of billiard balls and 30 smaller,
unfertilized eggs. There is an average of 10 days between nestings. The eggs
incubate for approximately 65 days.
Florida
Sea Turtle Information
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Turtle Nesting

In Florida, sea turtles
come ashore to nest beginning in May and hatching continues until late
October. A female can lay several nests during one season and only nests
every two or three years. The hard process of nesting takes hours. A turtle
must drag her massive weight out of the water to the dunes. She uses her
back flippers to dig a hole and deposits about one hundred rubbery eggs,
each the size of a ping-pong ball. The turtle disguises the nest by flinging
sand over it. Once she leaves the nest, she never returns.
Hatching
After incubating for two months,
the hatchlings break out of their shells and thrash about together causing
the walls of the nest to collapse and the bottom of the hole to rise. Once
near the surface, the hatchlings wait until the sand temperature cools to
emerge. Therefore most emerge after dark. Once out of the nest, the turtles
scramble to the water and swim offshore where they will live for several
years in seaweed beds drifting along the Gulf Stream. As the turtles grow
older they move into coastal waters.
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Sea Turtle Found in Florida
Five species of sea turtles inhabit Florida's waters during some of the
year. Florida's nesting sea turtles include the loggerhead (most common),
greens, and leatherback (least common). During the summer months, there are
approximately 50,000 sea turtles in Florida. This makes it the most
important nesting area in the United States. Other species of sea turtles
that frequent Florida waters but generally do not nest here include the
Hawksbill and the Kemp's Ridley.
Green Turtle
Named for the greenish color of its body fat, this turtle is listed as
endangered in Florida. Most green turtles nest in the Caribbean, but up to
2000 nests can be found in Florida each year. For centuries, Green turtles
were hunted for their meat that was made into soup. Hunting and egg
gathering greatly reduced their number. Green turtles graze on the vast
beds of sea grasses found throughout the tropics and are the only sea
turtles that eat plants. Some travel over a thousand miles to nest on
islands in the mid-Atlantic.
Hawksbill Turtle
This turtle is a relatively small turtle, and has been hunted to
the brink of extinction for its beautiful shell. Once relatively common in
Florida, these turtles now rarely nest here. They feed on sponges and
other invertebrates and tend to nest on small, isolated beaches.
Leatherback Turtle
This endangered turtle is the largest and most active of the sea
turtles. Up to eight feet in length, these huge turtles have a rubbery
dark shell marked by seven narrow ridges that run the length of their
back. Many travel thousands of miles and dive thousands of feet deep. They
also venture into much colder water than any other sea turtle. These
turtles feed on jellyfish and soft-bodied animals that would appear to
provide very little nutrition for such huge animals. Ingestion of plastic
bags and egg collecting are reasons for mortality and population declines.
About 200 leatherback nests are recorded in Florida each year.
Kemp's Ridley
The rarest and smallest of all the sea turtles, this endangered turtle
feeds in the coastal waters of Florida on blue crabs, other crabs and
shrimp. They nest on a single stretch of beach on the Gulf Coast of
Mexico.
Loggerhead Turtle
This is the most common sea turtle in Florida. It is classified as a
threatened, but not endangered species. Named because of its large head,
which can be ten inches wide, it has powerful jaws used to crush the
clams, crabs and encrusting animals on which it feeds. As many as 68,000
loggerhead nests have been found in Florida each year.
If You See A
Turtle
If you encounter a nesting sea
turtle on the beach stay clear. Do not shine lights
or take flash photographs. When frightened the nesting turtle will return to
the water where she will drop her eggs. If you see an injured, nesting or
dead sea turtle, call the Florida Marine Patrol at 1-800-DIAL FMP
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Sea Turtles Need Your Help!
Centuries ago, sea turtles
roamed our oceans by the millions. In the last 100 years their numbers been
greatly reduced. All seven species of sea turtles are in danger of
extinction. Demand for sea turtle meat, eggs, and other by-products, as well
as a loss of habitat, commercial fishing, and pollution have contributed to
their decline.
The main danger for hatchelings is from artificial lighting. When the
babies emerge, they instinctively move in the brightest direction. Normally,
this would be the open night sky reflected by the ocean. On a developed
beach, artificial lights attract the hatchelings, causing them to crawl in
the wrong direction. Other dangers include obstructions on the beach, such
as beach chairs, holes, or tire tracks, all of which can block their path to
the sea.
If you are visiting, or live near the beach, you can help by keeping outside
lights off during turtle season from May through October. Make sure to
remove chairs, umbrellas and other gear from the beach each night. Level all
sand castles and fill any holes dug during play. Please pick up all trash.
Sea turtles mistakenly eat debris, especially plastic, which results in
death. Never buy products made from sea turtles or any other endangered
species
If you own , rent or use property near the Gulf, please pay special
attention to this newsletter. It includes suggestions for low-cost ways
to help the sea turtles, which are protected by the Endangered Species
Act.
Thank you
Santa Rosa Island Authority
Information for this report was compiled from the Santa Rosa Island
Authority and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection,
"Understanding, Assessing, and Resolving Light-Pollution Problems on Sea
Turtle Nesting Beaches."
These Steps Will Make Sea Turtles Safer
Residents can help make the area safer for sea
turtles during their nesting and hatching season, which begins May 1 and
concludes October 31. Less light means a better chance of survival for
the sea turtles, which are protected by the Endangered Species Act.
Here's what you can do:
• Remove unneeded fixtures or lights.
• Use low-pressure sodium vapor lights.
• Place outdoor lights on motion sensors so they don't burn
needlessly.
• Attach shields to block beachside lights.
• Place security lights on motion sensors.
• Tint windows; close curtains after dark.
• Use directional fixtures which can be aimed down and away from the
beach.
• Move fixtures to block them from beach view.
• Use yellow “bug” lights of 50 watts or less; they're less likely to
attract sea turtles.
• Reduce height of fixtures.
• Place lights below dune line or shield with vegetation.
• Do not use spotlights on the beach.
How Beach Lighting Makes Sea Turtles Vulnerable
Lights, even from distant homes, can lead to
the deaths of sea turtles and their
hatchlings.
Light on the beach disorients the turtles and their hatchlings, luring
them away from the water and leaving them vulnerable to other animals,
exhaustion, passing automobiles and the morning sun.
Sea turtles nest in the dunes of Santa Rosa Island from May through
August; the babies hatch from mid-July to the end of October.
At hatching time, up to 150 hatchlings burst from the nest and dash to
the relative safety of the Gulf of Mexico. Moving quickly from the nest
to the sea is vital to their survival.
But lights attract -- and endanger -- sea turtles. They are drawn away
from the water by street lights, porch and deck lights, even lights
visible through windows of buildings
hundreds of feet away. This distraction can get them lost; a single
light near a nesting beach can misdirect hundreds of turtles and lead to
their death.
Lights and weather are major enemies of sea turtles. For example, 13
nests were found on Pensacola Beach last year. Twelve were loggerhead
turtle nests and one was a nest for green turtles.
Four nests were lost to Hurricane Earl, which rumbled erratically
through the Gulf of Mexico in early July before coming ashore near
Panama City.
Hatchlings at all of the remaining nests were disoriented and began
crawling toward lights in the area. National Park Service staffers were
present to reorient most of the hatchlings, but two of the nests hatched
when Park Service personnel were not present. Some of these hatchlings
were rescued but most died.
Lights at Beach Park Being Repositioned to Minimize Distraction to
Turtle Hatchlings
Gulf Power crews will soon redirect the lights
at the recreation park at the gate to
Fort Pickens to help encourage survival of sea turtles, which are
protected by the Endangered Species Act.
Three tall light poles will be moved slightly and their lamps will be
redirected so they shine toward the north, away from the Gulf of Mexico.
This should reduce distractions for sea turtles nesting nearby and
encourage the hatchlings to travel directly to the gulf.
This was just one of several trouble spots found during a recent survey
of Pensacola Beach's gulf front to determine areas of excessive lighting
that can hurt sea turtles. The survey was conducted by a team of
representatives from the Santa Rosa Island Authority, Gulf Power, the
National Park Service, the Pensacola Beach Residents & Leaseholders
Association, and the Pensa cola
Beach Chamber of Commerce.
The survey showed the extensive impact of lights, with many seen from
the beach even though they were in homes not directly on the gulf. Beach
areas were illuminated by lights from as far away as the north side of
Fort Pickens Road and Ariola Drive.
Island Authority staffers will contact leaseholders who had the highest
concentration of lights and discuss ways to reduce light shining on the
beach.
The Island Authority encourages citizen cooperation. If you see sea
turtles on the beach, please call the National Park Service, 916-3010.
If you have questions about your lights and their possible impact on sea
turtles, please call Debbie Norton, Island Authority, 932-2257. We will
be glad to work with you.
Choose Lights That Won't Hurt Sea Turtles, Hatchlings
  
Low-pressure sodium-vapor (LPS) lighting emits
a pure-yellow light that seems to affect nesting turtles less than light
from other sources, at least for loggerheads and green turtles, the most
common turtles on Santa Rosa Island.
LPS lighting has both advantages and disadvantages:
Expense:
LPS initially costs substantially more than incandescent or fluorescent
lights because it uses more expensive bulbs and ballasts . But operating
costs are generally much lower for LPS than for any other commercial
source.
Color
-- LPS sources are monochromatic and therefore give poor color
rendition. But full-spectrum color is seldom needed for safety and
security. For example, U.S. Air Force bases near nesting beaches in
Florida use LPS lights for most outside security areas.
Disposal -- The
lamps within LPS luminaries contain elemental sodium, which can cause
fires if disposed of carelessly. However, unlike some other lamps, the
contents of LPS lamps are not toxic.
Availability --
LPS luminaries are not as readily available in retail stores as other
light sources, but manufacturers offer a wide selection.
When using other conventional lighting systems, adjust the fixtures to
keep the light from being visible from the nesting beach.
Completely shielding fixtures with a sheet of metal flashing can reduce
stray light reaching the beach. Louvered step lighting is one of the
best ways to light balconies that are visible from nesting beaches.
For parking areas near nesting beaches, low-mounted, louvered bollard
fixtures are preferred, but fully hooded floodlights also can direct
light accurately and reduce stray light.
Q&A: Answers to Frequent Questions About Sea Turtles
When do hatchling sea turtles emerge from
their nests?
In the Southeast, hatchlings emerge in June,
July, August, September and October.
It is a myth that hatchlings emerge only around the time of a full moon.
Hatchlings ready to emerge wait just beneath the sand surface until
conditions become cool. This temperature cue prompts them to emerge
primarily at night, although some have emerged in late afternoon or
early morning.
When they emerge from their nests, how do
hatchling sea turtles know where the Gulf is?
They have an inborn tendency to move in the
brightest direction. On a beach, the brightest direction is most often
the open view of the night sky over, and reflected by, the gulf.
Hatchlings also tend to move away from darkly silhouetted objects such
as dunes and vegetation.
My neighbors' lights are visible from the
beach. Why should I modify the lights on my beachfront property?
Sea turtles benefit from any reduction of
artificial lighting on the nesting beach. As lighting is reduced,
hatchlings will have a better chance of reaching the sea.
How bright can a light be without affecting hatchlings or sea turtles
on the beach?
Unfortunately, no simple measure of light
intensity can reveal whether a light source is a problem. . . Any light
that is visible from the beach is likely to cause problems.
Will
placing bright lights on platforms offshore guide hatchlings into the
water off lighted beaches?
Apart from being overly expensive and
complicated, lighting the gulf to draw hatchlings offshore probably
would create more problems, such as interfering with hatchling dispersal
and making the babies more vulnerable to predatory fish.
How expensive is a beach-darkening program?
The simplest solution -- turning off lights
visible from the beach during the nesting season -- costs little or
nothing and may actually save electricity costs.
Most of the essential lighting that remains can be easily shielded so
that the light performs its intended function without reaching the
beach. Proper shields can be made from inexpensive metal flashing and
fastened with screws.
Replacing fixtures is more expensive but is necessary only when an owner
is concerned about lighting efficiency or aesthetics. Choosing
well-designed fixtures and incorporating light-management techniques
into the plans for coastal development are the most effective ways to
fulfill lighting needs while protecting sea turtles.
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Sea Turtle
Trivia
- Florida beaches are home to 80% of Loggerhead turtles
in the U.S.
- Turtles can migrate thousands of miles, but
usually return to lay their eggs on the same beach where they hatched
- Sea turtles have existed for over one hundred
million years
- It can take 15 - 50 years before a sea turtle
is capable of reproducing
- Scientists estimate that only 1 in 1000 to
10,000 babies will survive to adulthood
- Sea turtles live their entire life in the
ocean. The only time they comes ashore is when the female lays her
eggs.
- Sea turtles are reptiles. They breathe air,
and can hold their breath for long periods of time.
- When its time to sleep, a loggerhead will
wedge under a rock close to the shore, or take a snooze while floating
on the surface of deep water
- Hatchelings weigh less than one ounce and are
only two inches long. Adults can grow over 3 feet long and weigh 200
to 300 pounds!
- The nest temperature during incubation
determines a sea turtle's sex. Boys like it cool - Girls like it hot.
- Sea turtles have great underwater vision, but
are nearsighted out of the water.
- Although sea turtles do not have external
ears, they are capable of hearing low frequency sounds and vibrations
- Sea turtles use their strong jaws to crush a
diet of crabs, shrimp, mussels, and jelly fish
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