Types of sea turtles:
7 species of sea turtle are recognized worldwide, including:
- The loggerhead (Caretta caretta);
- Green turtle (Chelonia mydas);
- Leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea);
- Hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata);
- Kemp’s ridley (Lepidochelys kempii);
- Olive ridley (Lepidochelys olivacea);
- Flatback (Natator depressa)
All species but the flatback is listed as either endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
Population status and distribution:
Nesting
females provide general population estimates. The total number of
nesting females for the leatherback is < 35,000 ; the green turtle
is 88,520; the loggerhead is 44,560; the hawksbill is 22,900; the
Kemp’s ridley is >2,500; the olive ridley is 800,000; and the
flatback is 20,285.
Sea turtles are circumglobal species
occurring throughout the temperate and tropical regions of the
Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans. The green, hawksbill, and
loggerhead sea turtles occur around the Hawaiian islands and western
U.S. coast.
Ways to identify 3 U.S. species:
- Green:
Adults are medium to large turtles ranging in size from 36-43 inches
and weighing from 200-300 pounds. They are brownish in colour with a
radiating pattern of markings on the shell.
- Hawksbill:
Named for their hawk-like beak, adult hawksbills are small to medium
sized ranging 30-36 inches and weighing from 100-200 pounds. They have
a beautiful shell with thick overlapping scales providing the source of
tortoise shell jewelery and products.
- Loggerhead: These
turtles are named for their disproportionately large head. They are
large turtles ranging in size from 33-40 inches and weighing between
150-400 pounds. The shell of the loggerhead is reddish-brown.
Biology
- Sea
turtles have existed since before the time of the dinosaurs (150
million years ago), and some species such as the leatherback have
remained virtually unchanged for over 90 million years.
- Sea turtles do not have teeth but their powerful jaws enable them to feed on various types of food.
- The
hawksbill turtle dwells in tropical reefs and feeds primarily on
sponges. The loggerhead is also found around reefs, but frequents
wrecks and underwater structures feeding on crabs, jellyfish, and
mollusks. The green turtle is primarily a tropical herbivorous species,
feeding mainly on sea grasses.
- Sea turtles hatch from
eggs laid on land. Nesting is the only time that female sea turtles
return to land and males never return once hatched. Females often
return to the same beach that they were hatched to lay their eggs.
- Sea turtles migrate very long distances to nest and feed.
- Although
impossible to determine a sea turtle’s age by appearance, it is thought
that some sea turtles can live to exceed 100 years.
Threats
- The
greatest causes for green sea turtle population decline have been the
commercial harvest for eggs and meat, and poaching for leather and
jewelry. Bycatch in shrimp trawlers has increasingly led to green sea
turtle mortality.
- Commercial exploitation for
hawksbill shell in addition to leather, oil, perfume and cosmetics
contribute to this species’ decline. Hawksbill eggs are also harvested
for consumption.
- Loggerhead populations are mainly
threatened by coastal development, commercial fisheries, and pollution.
This species is also often killed by shrimp trawlers.
- Generally,
human activity is the major threat to sea turtles worldwide. Capture in
gillnets and other fishing gear, trawls, traps, and longlines;
harvesting; habitat destruction; and ocean pollution, all inhibit
conservation efforts. Disease, affecting certain species in some areas
of the world, naturally threatens sea turtle populations