The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Huge turtle likely starved

Leatherbac­k found dead in unlikely spot: a frozen Cape Breton lake

- BY MICHAEL MACDONALD

The endangered leatherbac­k sea turtle is an elusive creature of the deep.

Last week, however, scientists were stunned when one of these rare, huge reptiles turned up dead in an unlikely place: at the edge of a frozen Cape Breton lake.

Sea turtle biologist Mike James said it’s possible the turtle was following jellyfish — the leatherbac­k’s main source of food — when it entered saltwater Bras d’Or Lake through a narrow channel and later failed to find its way back to the open ocean.

There have been previous eyewitness accounts of leatherbac­ks in the lake, which is more like an inland sea. But this recent find represents the first time a specimen has been positively identified in the area.

“It’s a very significan­t record for sure,” James said Thursday from the Bedford Institute Oceanograp­hy in Halifax.

“It was probably alive pretty late into the year because of the (good) condition of the turtle’s carapace,” he said, referring to the turtle’s thin but tough layer of leather-like skin. The leatherbac­k is the only sea turtle that lacks a hard shell.

Laura Bourque, veterinary pathologis­t with the Canadian Wildlife Health Co-operative in Charlottet­own, performed a necropsy on the animal late Wednesday.

The 360-kilogram turtle — about the size of a grand piano — appeared to be emaciated.

Bourque confirmed there was no other obvious cause of death, though other tests have yet to be completed.

“What it was doing in the Bras d’Or lakes, I really can’t comment on that,” Bourque said in an interview from her lab at the Atlantic Veterinary College.

Samples taken from the turtle’s body will be analyzed for bacteria, parasites and disease.

“It helps us understand what are the threats to these species,” she said.

More often, leatherbac­ks die when they get entangled in fishing gear or if they eat plastic bags or balloons, having mistaken the trash for jellyfish.

Leatherbac­ks typically avoid narrow inlets, like the ones that connect Bras d’Or Lake to the Atlantic Ocean, James said.

However, unlike other reptiles, they can survive in relatively cold water because they have a thin layer of blubber, similar to marine mammals.

Leatherbac­ks are summertime visitors to Canada’s Atlantic coast and the Gulf of St. Lawrence, but they typically head south to tropical waters by October.

Given their wide range and elusive behaviour, no one really knows how many there are.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, FISHERIES AND OCEANS CANADA ?? A dead leatherbac­k sea turtle is seen in this undated handout photo. Preliminar­y tests suggest an endangered leatherbac­k sea turtle found frozen last week in Cape Breton’s Bras d’Or Lake likely died from starvation.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, FISHERIES AND OCEANS CANADA A dead leatherbac­k sea turtle is seen in this undated handout photo. Preliminar­y tests suggest an endangered leatherbac­k sea turtle found frozen last week in Cape Breton’s Bras d’Or Lake likely died from starvation.

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