| (Note: False crawls are cases in which a sea turtle emerges and then returns to sea without laying a nest.)
For nest counts by week, visit www.mote.org/2013nesting.
For nest counts from previous years, visit www.mote.org/environmentalupdates and click "Sea Turtle Nesting."
For information about nesting statewide, visit FWC’s Web site.
Help for Hatchlings
Hatching is now in full swing — and days are busy at the Hatchling Hospital within Mote’s public outreach facility, The Aquarium.
“This year we have admitted more hatchlings into our critical care hospital than at any other time since I joined Mote four years ago,” said Holly West, Sea Turtle Care Coordinator at Mote. “That’s a lot of little mouths to feed.” Currently, 63 rescued hatchlings — mainly loggerheads along with a small number of greens — are receiving care designed to help them heal and build up their strength so Mote can return them to sea. Hatchlings in the hospital will be released offshore by boat once they have healed and can dive and feed on their own. The hatchlings are from multiple Southwest Florida beaches, and many were recovered from nests damaged by predators such as raccoons and armadillos. Others lost their way to sea, or disoriented, and wandered into swimming pools, storm drains or other dangerous situations. Normally, hatchlings follow the brightest horizon to find the sea, but artificial lights visible from the beach and flashlights or lanterns on the beach can lure them away from the surf and into harm’s way.
Visitors in The Aquarium at Mote may see hatchlings inside the exhibit “Sea Turtles: Ancient Survivors.” Guests might even glimpse Mote staff weighing, measuring and checking hatchlings for injuries through a special viewing window added in 2012 thanks to a generous donation from the Kukanza family.
How to Help Sea Turtles
Support sea turtle conservation and research. Mote scientists are seeking donations of supplies and funding to help support our Sea Turtle Patrol activities for the remainder of the 2013 season and to prepare for 2014.
To make a donation, visit www.mote.org/donate (select “Research at Mote Marine Laboratory" and type “sea turtle research” in the comments box below). To make an in-kind donation of supplies, please contact Kathy Klingensmith at 941-388-4441, ext. 308 or kak@mote.org.
Supplies needed include:
- Black permanent markers from Sharpie
- 100-foot large measuring tapes with non-metal blades
- Paint roller covers, 9-inch and 4-inch (for painting yellow stakes to mark nests)
- Flagging tape (for marking nests)
- Latex gloves, medium size (for excavating hatched nests to document their contents)
- Rubber mallets (for pounding stakes into the sand to mark nests)
- Handheld GPS units (for documenting locations of turtle activities)
- Digital cameras (for documenting nests and turtle crawls)
- All-terrain vehicle covers (for ATVs used to patrol beaches)
- Yellow paint, 5-gallon cans (for painting stakes to mark nests)
- Large tarps (used when painting nest stakes)
- WD-40 lubricant (1 gallon)
- AAA and AA batteries (for GPS and cameras used to document nests)
- Waterproof field notebooks (from “Rite in the Rain” brand)
- Red LED headlamps (for monitoring and studying sea turtles at night on the beach – red light does not disturb nesting turtles or hatchlings)
Adopt a Sea Turtle in The Aquarium at Mote: Visit www.mote.org/adopt
Keep beaches clear for sea turtle hatchlings. With high numbers of nests this year, it’s more important than ever to keep beaches turtle-friendly for hatchlings trying to reach the sea.
Mote encourages coastal residents and visitors to follow these turtle-friendly tips:
Do:
If you encounter a nesting turtle or hatchlings, remain quiet and observe from a distance
Shield or turn off outdoor lights that are visible on the beach from May through October
Close drapes after dark and put beach furniture far back from the water
Fill in holes that may entrap hatchlings on their way to the water
Place trash in its proper place
Do Not:
Approach nesting turtles or hatchlings, make noise, or shine lights at turtles
Use flashlights or fishing lamps on the beach
Encourage a turtle to move while nesting or pick up hatchlings that have emerged and are heading for the water
Use fireworks on the beach
Sea turtles are protected under federal law and any harassment or interference with a sea turtle, living or dead, is subject to penalty. If you witness anyone disturbing a turtle or find an injured or disoriented hatchling or adult, please notify agents with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission at 1-888-404-FWCC (3922), the local sheriff’s department, and/or Mote Marine Laboratory’s Sea Turtle Program at 388-4331. If you find a dead or injured sea turtle contact Mote’s Stranding Investigations Program at 988-0212.
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