Rare sea turtles break nesting records in parts of Southeast
Biologist Mark Dodd, who heads Georgia’s sea turtle recovery program, attributes the recent nesting records to two conservation measures that were introduced decades ago. This includes the state closely monitoring and protecting sea turtle nests and a mandate requiring shrimp boats to equip their nets with escape hatches.
On Georgia’s beaches, 3,500 loggerhead nests have been recorded. The previous record for the state was 3,289 documented in 2016. Dodd said to expects the final count will likely reach 4,000 nests by the end of August.
Nesting for the sea turtles typically occurs from May through August where the up to 300-pound loggerheads crawl from the Atlantic Ocean and lay around 100 small eggs per nest.
“My laboratory is almost floor-to-ceiling in samples right now,” University of Georgia professor Joe Nairn, who studies adult female turtles, told AP. “It’s pretty obvious to us that this is a big year.”
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