Leatherback sea turtle. seen from above, that hatched on Aug. 2, on Sanibel, near the Tarpon Bay Road beach access. Four live hatchlings, including the one pictured, were found in the nest when it was dug on Aug. 3.
Leatherback sea turtle, see from its right profile, that hatched on Aug. 2, on Sanibel, near the Tarpon Bay Road beach access. Four live hatchlings, including the one pictured, were found in the nest when it was dug on August 3.
A nest of leatherback sea turtles — the first documented leatherback nest in Lee and Collier counties — hatched on Sanibel’s East End Sunday.
Volunteer Linda Gornick, a walker in SCCF’s Sea Turtle Research & Monitoring Program, found the nest on June 3. Gornick notified permittee Tom Krekel, who quickly determined it was not a loggerhead crawl. It was identified as a probable green sea turtle nest but the very large crawl and body pit raised the possibility that it was a leatherback nest.
A nest of leatherback sea turtles — the first documented leatherback nest in Lee and Collier counties — hatched on Sanibel’s East End Sunday.
Volunteer Linda Gornick, a walker in SCCF’s Sea Turtle Research & Monitoring Program, found the nest on June 3. Gornick notified permittee Tom Krekel, who quickly determined it was not a loggerhead crawl. It was identified as a probable green sea turtle nest but the very large crawl and body pit raised the possibility that it was a leatherback nest.
A nest of leatherback sea turtles — the first documented leatherback nest in Lee and Collier counties — hatched on Sanibel’s East End Sunday.
Volunteer Linda Gornick, a walker in SCCF’s Sea Turtle Research & Monitoring Program, found the nest on June 3. Gornick notified permittee Tom Krekel, who quickly determined it was not a loggerhead crawl. It was identified as a probable green sea turtle nest but the very large crawl and body pit raised the possibility that it was a leatherback nest.
A nest of leatherback sea turtles — the first documented leatherback nest in Lee and Collier counties — hatched on Sanibel’s East End Sunday.
Volunteer Linda Gornick, a walker in SCCF’s Sea Turtle Research & Monitoring Program, found the nest on June 3. Gornick notified permittee Tom Krekel, who quickly determined it was not a loggerhead crawl. It was identified as a probable green sea turtle nest but the very large crawl and body pit raised the possibility that it was a leatherback nest. Photos of both the nest and crawl were provided to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, and confirmation was received that it was probably a green.
SCCF Sea Turtle Coordinator Amanda Bryant with herpetologist Chris Lechowicz dug the nest on the morning of Aug. 3. There were 90 empty eggshells and four live leatherback hatchlings were recovered. The hatchlings were released that night. Hatched nests are normally dug after three days but the nest was dug early because it was in immediate danger of predation (a ghost crab was already digging in the nest when Bryant arrived).
Leatherbacks very rarely nest in Southwest Florida; one leatherback nest was documented in Sarasota County. Leatherbacks do nest along the Florida panhandle and the east coast; a few leatherback hatchlings from the east coast were released on Sanibel in the ’70s as part of an experiment.
The crawls of loggerheads are easily distinguished from those of greens and leatherbacks because loggerheads alternate the front flippers when they crawl on land. Greens and leatherbacks use both left and right flippers at the same time, creating a parallel crawl. The June 3 crawl was wider than a loggerhead crawl, there was a very large body pit and a large mound of sand camouflaging the nest area.
SCCF coordinates more than 100 volunteers who monitor sea turtle nesting on the islands each season, from May through October. To learn more about the leatherback nest, visit www.sccf.org/content/171/Green-Sea-Turtle-Nest.aspx or come to a Turtle Tracks program at SCCF, offered every Thursday at 9 a.m. Call 472-2329 for more information.
Source of story and photos: SCCF
Leatherback sea turtle. seen from above, that hatched on Aug. 2, on Sanibel, near the Tarpon Bay Road beach access. Four live hatchlings, including the one pictured, were found in the nest when it was dug on Aug. 3.
Leatherback sea turtle, see from its right profile, that hatched on Aug. 2, on Sanibel, near the Tarpon Bay Road beach access. Four live hatchlings, including the one pictured, were found in the nest when it was dug on August 3.