
Report shows sea turtle decline
After
encouraging gains in the 1990s, populations of loggerhead sea turtles
are now dropping, primarily because of commercial fishing, according to
a federal review.
The report stops short of recommending upgrading the federally
threatened species to "endangered" status. But scientists and
environmentalists say it should serve as a wake-up call about the future
of loggerheads, which can grow to more than 300 pounds and are believed
to be one of the oldest species.
"We are very concerned," said Mark Dodd, a wildlife biologist for the
state of Georgia. In 2006, the state
counted the third lowest loggerhead nesting total since daily monitoring
began in 1989.
"As a biologist, you're always trying to find that point at which we
really have to start doing something drastic if we want to maintain
loggerhead populations on our beaches."
The state is not there yet, he said, but it has increased protections
for the turtle under its own endangered species law.
The Southeast - Florida in particular - is one of the two largest
loggerhead nesting areas in the world; eggs are laid and hatched along
beaches from Texas to North Carolina. The other major nesting area is in
the Middle Eastern nation of Oman.
According to the federal report, U.S. nestings have dropped almost
seven per cent annually in the Gulf of Mexico in recent years. Numbers
in south Florida are down about four per cent annually, while
populations in the Carolinas and Georgia have dropped about two per cent
per year.
The review, a five-year status update required under the Endangered
Species Act, compiled data from previous local reports, which showed
similar trends. It was conducted by the Fish and Wildlife Service and
the National Marine Fisheries Service, which jointly have jurisdiction
(authority) over protecting the turtles.
The agencies also issued updates, with mixed results, on five other
sea turtles from around the world.
The U.S. loggerhead trend is a marked turnaround from the steady or
increasing numbers found in the 1990s. In south Florida, for example,
nesting studies showed gains of almost four per cent per year from 1989
to 1998. Researchers are puzzled by the shift; some suspect expanding
commercial fishing operations are to blame. The report said fisheries
are the "most significant man-made factor affecting the conservation and
recovery of the loggerhead."
Barbara Schroeder, national sea turtle coordinator for the National
Marine Fisheries Service, said the problem is growing as developing
countries bring fishing fleets on line, fishing ships go farther from
land and demand for seafood increases.
The loggerhead lives most of its life in the sea, migrating vast
distances according to season. Females leave the water only for
reproduction, digging nests in the sand, covering them and returning to
sea.
In nesting season, they can lay hundreds of the small, white,
leathery eggs.
The eggs hatch after about two months and the young turtles crawl to
the ocean. Because little is known of the animal's migratory patterns,
scientists rely largely on nesting numbers to gauge (measure) population
strength.
Environmental groups and government agencies have worked to raise
awareness of the nests. They have opposed construction of sea walls and
other beachfront barriers and urged property owners to reduce or
eliminate beachfront lights that can disorient hatchlings.
The government intends to issue an updated recovery plan for the
turtle in the coming months, but advocates say federal agencies have
responded slowly to threats to the species.
Citing the long-term trends confirmed in the new study, they want
more money spent to evaluate the loggerhead's migration patterns and its
encounters with fishing fleets.
Oceana, a worldwide advocacy group that monitors ocean health, is
calling for the creation of protected habitats where commercial fishing
would not be allowed during certain times of the year.
The report "raises the bar for the agency to act and to stop the
interactions between the sea turtles and the fishing gear," said Dave
Allison, director of Oceana's campaign to protect sea turtles. "It's not
enough to simply slow down the extinction of these animals. There is an
affirmative responsibility to rebuild those populations."
AP |