Turtles under threat: Ocean warming forcing leatherback turtles to travel further for food

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Greenpeace Report

two scuba diver are holding a sign saying 'Save Our Sea - Greenpeace"
Greenpeace divers together with scientists from Silliman University, Apo island community members, the Marine Protected Area Management Board and Apo island dive wardens, unfurl a banner reading “Save our Seas”.
The Marine Protected Area (MPA) was destroyed by Typhoon Pablo in December 2012. An increase in extreme weather events is one of the predicted effects of climate change. Greenpeace is in Apo island as part of its Philippine leg of the “Ocean Defenders Tour of South East Asia”.

New research tracking the migrations of leatherback turtles after leaving their nesting grounds in French Guiana shows that they must travel almost twice as far as groups previously observed to reach feeding grounds. This indicates their behaviour is modifying to adapt to rapidly rising ocean temperatures and changing currents, both caused by climate change.

a turtle swimming in the coral reef looking for food
A critically endangered hawksbill turtle swims over the coral gardens at Kanawa Island near Flores, Indonesia. The island is located in the Komodo National Park.

The extra energy expended to find feeding grounds is likely to reduce the number of eggs they lay each season, reducing the size of the population further. The number of eggs laid by sea turtles on beaches in French Guiana is approximately 100 times smaller now than it was in the 1990s with fewer than 200 nests per season now, compared to 50,000 in the 1990s.

a turtle swimming in the reef
A critically endangered hawksbill turtle swims over the coral gardens at Kanawa Island near Flores, Indonesia. The island is located in the Komodo National Park.

Will McCallum of Greenpeace’s Protect the Oceans campaign, said:

“Sea turtles survived the extinction of the dinosaurs, but they might not survive us. Human activity has put such severe pressure on sea turtle populations around the world that six out of the seven species of sea turtle are threatened with extinction, and without urgent action, the situation will only get worse.

An officer is trying to install a GPS on the back of the leatherback sea turtle.
A camera and GPS are installed on a leatherback sea turtle by Damien Chevallier, researcher at the CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research), on Awala Yalimapo Beach during a research expedition in French Guiana with Greenpeace.
Mardi 4 juin 2019. Awala Yalimapo Beach, mission Tortue de Greenpeace avec Damien Chevallier, chercheur au CNRS en mission de recherche sur les tortues.
Des scientifiques en train de fixer une balise GPS et une caméra embarquée sur la tortue luth.

“The death of one out of the ten turtles we tracked just 120km from her nesting ground after being caught in a discarded fishing net is a stark and tangible reminder of the damage being caused to the oceans by humans. We must protect our oceans with a network of sanctuaries where turtles and other animals are safe to breed, grow old and feed. To do this we need a strong new Global Ocean Treaty to be agreed at the United Nations this year.”

The researchers, led by Damien Chevallier, tagged ten nesting female turtles on the Yalimapo and Remire-Montjoly beaches in French Guiana to track their subsequent migrations through the North Atlantic, some swimming as far as Canada and France to find feeding grounds. Each of these turtles was given a name. One of them, Frida, was found dead on a beach in Suriname just 120km from her starting point. She had become caught in a gill net, which caused her to drown.

a leatherback sea turtle is walking on the beach with a GPS on her back.
A leatherback sea turtle on Awala Yalimapo Beach with a GPS Argos beacon on its back, which was installed by Damien Chevallier, a researcher at the CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research), during a research expedition in French Guiana with Greenpeace.
Mercredi 5 juin 2019. Plage d’Awala Yalimapo, Mission Tortues en Guyane. Greenpeace. Pose d’une balise Argos sur la carapace d’une tortue Luth par Damien Chevallier, chercheur au CNRS.

Leatherback turtles migrate north after nesting to reach cooler waters where jellyfish, their prey, are more abundant. As the oceans warm and currents change, sea turtles are being forced to travel greater distances to find these abundant hunting grounds. 

To protect sea turtles, and all forms of marine life, Greenpeace is campaigning for a strong new Global Ocean Treaty, which would pave the way for a global network of Fully Protected Marine Sanctuaries covering 30% of the world’s oceans by 2030. This would give sea turtles, all other forms of marine life, and the oceans themselves, the space they need to recover from harmful human activity.

a turtle hatching from the egg
Turtle egg with leather turtle young breaking out. French Guiana.
This piece was prepared online by Panuruji Kenta, Publisher, SEVENSEAS Media