The Guardian (USA)

Leatherbac­k turtle nest numbers in south Florida double previous record

- Maya Yang and agency

The number of leatherbac­k turtle nests found along some south Florida beaches reached record numbers this year, surprising biologists.

The 79 nests laid by endangered turtles along beaches in Broward county this year is nearly double the previous record, according to the South Florida SunSentine­l. The previous record was 46 in 2012, and the record low for leatherbac­k nests was 12 in 2017.

“It’s difficult to say why Broward county saw such an increase in leatherbac­k nesting this season,” Stephanie Kedzuf, a Broward county biologist who specialize­s in sea turtles, told the newspaper.

Leatherbac­k turtles are the largest in the world and are the only turtle species that lacks scales and a hard shell. Instead, they have tough, rubbery skin and typically crawl on to beaches at night and dig holes to lay their eggs in the sand. When the turtles hatch, they race towards the ocean while avoiding predators such as crabs and birds.

Despite having the widest global distributi­on of any reptile, leatherbac­k turtles are rapidly declining in various parts of the world. According to the National Marine Fisheries Service, leatherbac­ks’ global population has declined 40% over the past three generation­s, with the Pacific leatherbac­k being most at risk.

Major risk factors include fishing gear, which can entangle the turtles, degradatio­n of nesting habitats, vessel strikes, climate change and ocean pollution that can cause leatherbac­ks to ingest fishing lines, balloons, floating tar or oil and other discarded materials.

That said, despite being unable to pinpoint exact reasons behind leatherbac­ks’ nesting this season, marine life researcher­s in the past year have pinpointed several theories behind the increase. Covid-19 restrictio­ns that have kept humans and harmful waste off beaches have been shown to have a beneficial effect on the number of leatherbac­ks in Florida.

“The chances that turtles are going to be inadverten­tly struck and killed will be lower,” said David Godfrey, the executive director of the Sea Turtle Conservanc­y, to the Guardian last year.

“All of the reduced human presence on the beach also means that there will be less garbage and other plastics entering the marine environmen­t. Ingestion and entangleme­nt in plastic and marine debris also are leading causes of injury to sea turtles,” he added.

This year’s nesting season ran from 1 March to 31 October. During the season, 2,795 nests of sea turtles of all species were recorded along Broward county beaches, the SunSentine­l reported.

 ?? Photograph: Carlos Drews/WWF/PA ?? A female leatherbac­k digs a nest on the beach.
Photograph: Carlos Drews/WWF/PA A female leatherbac­k digs a nest on the beach.

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