The Columbus Dispatch

Decades in the making

30 years of conservati­on efforts pay off with turtle nesting boom

- By Russ Bynum

SAVANNAH, Ga. — Rare sea turtles are smashing nesting records this summer on beaches in the Southeast, with scientists crediting the egg-laying boom to conservati­on measures that began more than 30 years ago.

Giant loggerhead sea turtles weighing up to 300 pounds crawl ashore to dig nests in the sand every summer along the southern Atlantic coast. Though nesting typically occurs from May through August, record nest counts set in 2016 have already been surpassed in Georgia and South Carolina. North Carolina is also closing in on its record count.

So far this year, researcher­s and volunteers in those three states have cataloged more than 12,200 nests left by loggerhead­s, a threatened species protected under the Endangered Species Act. That’s already far ahead of the 11,321 nests in the previous highest count three years ago.

“My laboratory is almost floor-to-ceiling in samples right now,” said University of Georgia professor Joe Nairn, who studies adult female

turtles using DNA extracted from eggshell samples taken from each loggerhead nest found in the three states. “It’s pretty obvious to us that this is a big year.”

Loggerhead­s crawling from the surf of the Atlantic Ocean lay roughly 100 pingpong-ball sized eggs per nest. During the nesting season, volunteers from North Carolina to Florida comb the shoreline each day around sunrise to catalog new nests and cover them with protective screens to keep out wild hogs and other predators until the eggs hatch.

The nest counts serve as a key indicator of the overall population’s health. Female loggerhead­s tend to lay eggs only every three to four years, so the numbers often fluctuate. Still, scientists have seen an encouragin­g leap in the past 15 years.

Loggerhead nesting along Georgia’s 100-mile coast hit its low point in 2004 with fewer than 400 nests.

So far this year, more than 3,500 loggerhead nests have been recorded on Georgia’s beaches, surpassing the state’s 2016 record of 3,289. Mark Dodd, the state biologist who heads Georgia’s sea turtle recovery program, said he expects the final count to reach 4,000 nests by the end of August.

Dodd says the rebound can likely be traced to two key conservati­on measures taken up decades ago. States have stepped up monitoring and protection of sea turtle nests since loggerhead­s were listed as a threatened species in 1978. And shrimp boats trawling in U.S. waters since 1987 have been required to equip their nets with escape hatches for sea turtles.

Scientists suspect those decades-old efforts are showing big results now because female loggerhead­s don’t reach full maturity and start nesting until they’re about 30 years old.

“They’ve been able to survive to maturity and reproduce and come back to lay eggs,” said Michelle Pate, who leads the sea turtle program for the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources. “It’s been a long haul, but I think we’re finally seeing it pay off.”

 ?? [GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES] ?? A loggerhead sea turtle returns to the ocean after nesting on Ossabaw Island, Ga. The giant federally protected turtles are having an egg-laying boom on beaches in Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina, where scientists have counted record numbers of nests this summer.
[GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES] A loggerhead sea turtle returns to the ocean after nesting on Ossabaw Island, Ga. The giant federally protected turtles are having an egg-laying boom on beaches in Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina, where scientists have counted record numbers of nests this summer.

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