Tuesday Turtles: Loggerhead sea turtles nesting in record numbers

It’s just halfway through the annual nesting season for sea turtles in the SE coast of the U.S., but it’s looking to be a banner year with record numbers.

By early July, more than 10,000 loggerhead sea turtle nests have been logged by organizations and volunteers and reported to the Northern Recovery Unit Loggerhead DNA Project, housed in the University of Georgia’s Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources.

The lab is almost floor-to-ceiling full of samples collected already.  Before this year, the highest number of nests recorded was 11,321 in 2016—representing a full season of data.

“There’s no question in my mind that we will break that record,” said Joe Nairn, a professor who, with assistant research scientist Brian Shamblin, developed a system of identifying and tracking female loggerheads by using the DNA extracted from their eggshells.

Nairn attributes this year’s success to two factors: Better nest protection efforts that began in the 1960s, as well as the increased use of “turtle excluder devices” in shrimp trawler nets.

Because it takes 30 to 40 years for a sea turtle to mature to reproductive age, better nest protections mean more turtles have been able to hatch and make their way back to the ocean, Nairn said. And with the increased use of the turtle excluder devices, he added, more turtles are able to survive longer into their reproductive years.

“So, with a reduced number of female deaths and an increased number of hatchlings in the water, we’re beginning to see the results of those efforts,” he added.

Nairn and Shamblin collect turtle DNA through a partnership called the Northern Recovery Unit Loggerhead DNA Project, which has, for the past decade, collected DNA from eggshells and logged them into a database.

As a result, researchers have data on more than 10,000 female loggerhead turtles who make nests between North Florida and the Mid-Atlantic region, one of two nesting grounds for loggerheads in the world.

 

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Peg Fong is also in recovery from newspapers

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