Community Corner
Sea Turtles Lay Near-Record Number Of Nests In Sarasota
Mote Marine Laboratory reported that sea turtles laid a near-record number of nests from Longboat Key to Venice this season.
SARASOTA, FL -- Despite the ravages of red tide on marine life over the past several months, Mote Marine Laboratory reported that sea turtles laid a near-record number of nests from Longboat Key to Venice during the 2018 nesting season.
A total of 3,151 nests ā 3,142 from loggerhead sea turtles and nine from green sea turtles ā were documented this year by Moteās Sea Turtle Conservation & Research Program, which patrols the 35-mile stretch of beaches each day of nesting season, May 1-Oct. 31.
Mote Marine Laboratory scientists have monitored this stretch of nesting beaches for 37 years.
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āThis yearās total is the third highest overall since our program began about 37 years ago,ā said Mote senior biologist Melissa Bernhard, noting that the two highest totals for Moteās area occurred in 2016 (4,588 nests) and 2017 (4,503 nests). āOver decades, we have learned and are still learning a great deal about the nesting behaviors of sea turtles individually and at the population level, impacts of human activity and animal predators, sea turtle population trends and more.ā
Sea turtles have existed for 110 million years but today they are in jeopardy due to habitat encroachment and degradation, pollution, incidental capture in commercial fisheries, and strikes by watercraft.
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In 1979 under a cooperative agreement between the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Florida began its Statewide Nesting Beach Survey program to monitor sea turtle nesting along Florida's 825 miles of beaches.
Moteās Sea Turtle Conservation & Research Program is among the conservation organizations that contribute its data to the statewide cooperative effort to monitor sea turtle nesting.
The organizations track the number of nests and false crawls by sea turtles.
*A false crawl occurs when a sea turtle emerges to nest but returns to sea without leaving a nest," said Bernhard.

On July 19, Mote scientists fitted a nesting green sea turtle nicknamed āGigi" with a satellite tag on Casey Key. Green sea turtles have been nesting along southwest Florida beaches in increasing numbers in recent years, presenting an opportunity to tag nesting females and grow the small data set on this species in the Gulf of Mexico.
āGigi is one of the few green sea turtles to nest on Casey Key in 2018, and she will teach us more about how many nests green turtles lay, where they go when they have completed nesting and what routes they use to get there,ā said Mote senior biologist Kristen Mazzarella.
By mid-October, Gigiās track combined with Moteās Turtle Patrol data indicated that she nested six times this summer and ,on Oct. 9 she began to leave the area to travel to her foraging grounds. As of Oct. 28, she has traveled past the northwest coast of Cuba and onward toward Cancun, Mexico. Mote scientists look forward to seeing where she travels to forage for the next few years.
In 2018 Mote scientists also satellite-tagged six male loggerhead sea turtles that stranded and received hospital care but would not otherwise have come ashore.
This year, Mote scientists continued to document the challenges facing sea turtle hatchlings, including disorientation due to artificial lights visible from the beach in some areas. Loggerhead and green sea turtle hatchlings emerge at night and normally use dim, natural light to find the sea. Disoriented hatchlings may crawl into swimming pools, roads or other dangerous situations, and exhaust the energy they need to start life at sea. Mote scientists also continued to document some impacts from predators ā primarily raccoons, armadillos and coyotes ā that damage or destroy nests.
The 2018 nesting season coincided with a widespread bloom of Florida red tide, which began in fall 2017 and has lasted a year. From November 2017 through Oct. 24, 2018, the red tide bloom is estimated to have killed or caused the stranding of 531 sea turtles along southwest Florida ā 116 in Sarasota County alone ā according to FWC.
Moteās Stranding Investigations Program, which responds to deceased and distressed sea turtles and marine mammals in Sarasota and Manatee counties, noted that the bloom largely affected the areaās juvenile and sub-adult sea turtles, as well as some adult males, but nesting adult females and newly emerged hatchlings did not show a similar spike in mortality.
Sea turtles are exposed to red tide toxins by eating contaminated prey, but nesting adult females typically arenāt feeding, and their hatchlings donāt feed until after their āswim frenzyā that propels them offshore. When they begin feeding, hatchlings are generally well beyond shore areas where the red tide blooms often persist.
This summer, seven Mote staff, 16 interns and most of the 275-300 volunteers in Moteās Sea Turtle Patrol braved the red tide-caused respiratory irritation on local beaches to complete their daily nest-marking and data-collection mission. In addition to their already herculean task, the Sea Turtle Patrol assisted the Stranding Investigations Program by being among the first people to report stranded turtles and dolphins, often assisting with their recovery and documentation as well. Decades of data from Mote and others around the state are critical for understanding how sea turtles are faring amid numerous threats.
āIt was heartbreaking to be on the beach every day and see the red tide impacts on wildlife, but most of our volunteers were able to continue monitoring the beaches and help us collect valuable data for our efforts to conserve our local sea turtles,ā Bernhard said. āWe truly could not have done it without them.ā
Images via Mote
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