Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Jetwing Yala welcomes first batch of sea turtles for 2021

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Jetwing Yala welcomed its first batch of turtle nests for the season early last week.

Keeping with the long-standing conservati­on efforts at the hotel, two nests at Jetwing Yala’s beachfront were protected in-situ to prevent disturbanc­e by feral animals. A third nest, partially disturbed, was discovered further along the beach and was relocated to a fenced turtle nest conservati­on area maintained at the hotel in collaborat­ion with the Department of Wildlife.

Last year, over 11 such nests were conserved by the associates at Jetwing Yala, providing over a thousand hatchlings with much-needed protection during their vulnerable first hours of life. The safety afforded at Jetwing ensures that the cycle of nesting continues along the beaches of Yala, as turtles are known to return to their beach of hatching year-after-year.

The efforts of the hotel were recognized by the Department of Wildlife which, in 2019, decided to construct a turtle egg conservato­ry adjoining the hotel premises where eggs can be protected from unscrupulo­us poachers and feral animals.

Turtles are ancient reptiles, their ancestors appearing in the fossil record 250 million years ago and outlasting the age of the dinosaurs. The beaches of Sri Lanka are home to five of the seven extant species of sea turtles, including the largest living turtle on Earth – the leatherbac­k sea turtle (Dermochely­s coriacea). All seven species are considered threatened globally, their population­s plummeting as a result of poaching for both eggs and meat, disturbanc­e of nesting beaches, being caught as bycatch in commercial fisheries, and changes to global climatic conditions which affect their nesting habits.

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