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Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas)
The green sea turtle was listed
as endangered/threatened on July 28, 1978.
The breeding populations off Florida and the Pacific coast of Mexico are listed as endangered while all others are threatened.
Distribution
In the southeastern United States, green turtles are found around the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico,
and the continental U.S. from Texas to Massachusetts. Important feeding grounds in Florida include Indian River Lagoon, the Florida Keys, Florida Bay, Homosassa, Crystal River and Cedar Key. The primary nesting sites in U.S. Atlantic
waters are along the east coast of Florida, with additional sites in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.
Green turtles are found throughout the North Pacific,
ranging as far north as Eliza Harbor, Admiralty
Island, Alaska, and Ucluelet, British
Columbia. In the
eastern North Pacific, green turtles have been sighted from Baja California to southern Alaska. In the central Pacific, green turtles can be found at most
tropical islands. In U.S. Hawaiian waters, green turtles are found around most
of the islands in the Hawaiian Archipelago. The primary nesting site is at
French Frigate Shoals.
Human Impacts
on Green Sea Turtles
I) Impacts to nesting
activities:
- In the United
States, killing of nesting green
turtles is infrequent. However, in a number of areas, egg poaching is
still a concern.
- Erosion of nesting
beaches can result in loss of nesting habitat.
- Development of
beachfronts results in fortification to protect property from erosion,
resulting in loss of a dry nesting beach by preventing females from
getting to nesting sites.
- Beach nourishment during
the nesting season buries nests and disturbs nesting turtles.
- Artificial lighting can
cause disorientation and misorientation of both adults and hatchlings.
Turtle hatchlings are attracted to light, ignoring or coming out of the
ocean to go towards a light source, increasing their chances of death or
injury. In addition, as nesting females avoid areas with intense lighting,
highly developed areas may cause problems for turtles trying to nest.
- Repeated mechanical
raking of nesting beaches by heavy machinery can result in compact sand
and causes tire ruts which may hinder or trap hatchlings. Rakes can
penetrate the surface and disturb or uncover a nest. Disposing of debris
on the high beach can cover nests and may alter nest temperature.
- The most serious threat
of nighttime use of a beach is the disturbance of nesting females. Heavy
utilization of nesting beaches by humans may also result in lowered
hatchling success due to sand compaction.
- The placement of
physical obstacles on a beach can hamper or deter nesting attempts as well
as interfere with the incubation of eggs and the emergence of hatchlings.
- The use of off-road
vehicles on beaches is a serious problem in many areas. It may result in
decreased hatchling success due to sand compaction, or directly kill
hatchlings. Tire ruts may also interfere with the ability of hatchlings to
get to the ocean.
- The invasion of a
nesting site by non-native beach vegetation can lead to increased erosion
and destruction of a nesting habitat. Trees shading a beach can also
change nest temperatures, altering the natural sex ratio of the
hatchlings.
II) Impacts in the marine
environment
- Dredging can result in
habitat destruction by disrupting nesting or foraging grounds. Hopper
dredges can also kill turtles caught in dragheads.
- Green turtles eat a wide
variety of marine debris such as plastic bags, plastic and styrofoam
pieces, tar balls, balloons and plastic pellets. Effects of consumption
include interference in metabolism or gut function, even at low levels of
ingestion, as well as absorption of toxic byproducts. NMFS is currently
analyzing stranding data and available necropsy information to determine
the magnitude of debris ingestion.
- Commercial fishing
It is estimated that
before the implementation of TED requirements, the offshore commercial shrimp
fleet captured about 925 green turtles a year, of which approximately 225 would
die. Most turtles killed are juveniles and sub-adults. Bluefish, croaker and
flounder trawl fishing are also serious threats.
Turtles are be taken by
purse seine fisheries in the Atlantic and Gulf of
Mexico, but the magnitude of take
is currently not known.
Several thousand
vessels are involved in hook and line fishing for various coastal species. The
capturing of turtles is not uncommon, but the number is not known.
Significant numbers of
turtles may be killed by gill and trammel net fisheries off the eastern coast
of central Florida. An exact number is not known.
Pound net fisheries are
primarily a problem in waters off of Virginia, where turtles get tangled in the gear and drown. In North Carolina, live turtles are often released from pound nets.
Over 330 sea turtles of
various types (a few of which were green) were captured in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico EEZ in the Japanese tuna longline fishery from 1978-1981. Due
to expansion of this type of fishing, it may have a significant impact on sea
turtle recovery. The number of deaths is unknown.
Green turtles become
entangled in trap lines and drown. The impact on the population has not been
determined.
- In areas where recreational
boating and ship traffic is intense, propeller and collision injuries are
not uncommon.
- Marine turtles are at
risk when encountering an oil spill. Respiration, skin, blood chemistry
and salt gland functions are affected.
- Pesticides, heavy metals
and PCB's have been detected in turtles and eggs, but their effect is
unknown.
- Marina
and dock development can cause foraging habitat to be destroyed or
damaged. It can also lead to increased boat traffic, increasing the risk
of turtle/vessel collisions.
- Turtles have been caught
in saltwater intake systems of coastal power plants. The mortality rate of
the turtles involved is estimated at 7%.
- Underwater explosions
(e.g. gas and oil structure removal and testing using explosives) can kill
or injure turtles, and may destroy or damage habitat.
- Turtles get caught in
discarded fishing gear. The number affected is unknown, but is potentially
significant.
- Illegal harvesting of
green turtles is uncommon in the U.S.
No estimates of take exist. Illegal take of green turtles in the Caribbean,
particularly near Puerto Rico, is a significant
problem.
Excerpt from an article at: http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/turtles/green.html
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