Рассказ про зеленую морскую черепаху

Зеленая черепаха считается одной из самых крупных морских черепах. Второе ее название – «суповая» черепаха, что говорит само за себя. Многие путешественники приложили немало усилий в освоении Нового Света и Карибского моря, при этом они массово истребляли  этих морских обитателей, отправляясь в путешествия, чтобы открыть новые земли.

Черепах уничтожали в больших количествах, пополняя запасы еды. Их вяленое и сушеное мясо грузили на корабли. Из этого мяса готовили суп. Суп из этих черепах даже в наше время относится к деликатесным блюдам. Именно поэтому зеленые черепахи в наше время оказались на грани вымирания.

Содержание

  • 1 Зеленая черепаха: описание
    • 1.1 Внешний вид
    • 1.2 Характер и образ жизни
    • 1.3 Сколько живут зеленые черепахи
    • 1.4 Подвиды черепахи
    • 1.5 Где обитает зеленая черепаха
    • 1.6 Чем питается зеленая черепаха
    • 1.7 Размножение и потомство
    • 1.8 Естественные враги
  • 2 Черепахи и человек
  • 3 Популяция и статус вида
  • 4 В заключение

Зеленая черепаха: описание

Это прекрасные морские обитатели, за которыми интересно наблюдать, когда они просто плывут в толще воды или пасутся в прибрежной зоне, поедая морские водоросли. Панцирь сравнительно огромный и состоит из щитков зеленого и коричневого с желтым оттенком. Подобный вид окраса прекрасно маскирует черепаху в водной среде, защищая ее, от природных врагов.

Внешний вид

Панцирь черепахи характеризуется овальной формой, при этом его длина может достигать почти 2 метра, хотя в основном встречаются особи  с длиной панциря не больше 1 метра. Следует обратить внимание на строение панциря, который состоит из щитков, плотно прилегающих друг к другу. Такими же щитками частично покрыта и голова рептилии. Глаза сравнительно большие, миндалевидной формы, с круглыми зрачками.

Интересный момент! Черепахи с помощью ласт не только прекрасно плавают, но и перемещаются по суше. На конце каждой ласты располагается небольшой коготок.

В среднем, взрослые особи весят в пределах ста килограммов, но это не предел, так как встречаются особи, весом до 200 килограммов. Следует отметить, что зарегистрирован рекордный вес зеленой черепахи, который составил почти полтонны. Расцветка панциря зависит, как от того, в каких условиях черепаха появилась на свет, так и от того, в каких условиях она обитает. В связи с этим, встречаются черепахи болотного оттенка, грязно-зеленого, а также коричневого, с присутствием неровных пятен желтого цвета. Кожа, а также жир, который накапливается под панцирем с внутренней стороны, характеризуются зеленым оттенком. Именно поэтому блюда из зеленой черепахи обладают особым вкусом.

Гигантская зелёная морская черепаха / Подводная съёмка

Характер и образ жизни

Морские черепахи предпочитают вести уединенный образ жизни, поэтому черепах в составе группы встретить практически невозможно. Ученые до сих пор не могут разгадать, каким образом черепахи ориентируются на просторах Мирового океана. Они способны в один и тот же день собраться в определенном месте, чтобы воспроизвести себе подобных.

После появления на свет, черепахи на протяжении десятилетий, преодолев по просторам Мирового океана десятки тысяч километров, безошибочно находят то место, где они появились на свет.

Морские черепахи – это неагрессивные и доверчивые морские обитатели, которые стараются придерживаться прибрежной зоны, где глубина не больше 10 метров. В таких условиях они могут погреться на поверхности воды или выбраться на берег, чтобы принять солнечные ванны. В прибрежной зоне они также кормятся. Черепахи через  каждые 5 минут появляются на поверхности воды, чтобы запастись свежим глотком воздуха, так как дышат черепахи с помощью легких.

Находясь в состоянии покоя или в состоянии сна, черепахи не появляются на поверхности воды в течение нескольких часов. С помощью передних конечностей-ласт черепахи могут развивать скорость до 10 км/час, что для таких морских обитателей совсем неплохо.

Как только маленьким черепашкам удается освободиться от скорлупы, они по песку спешат попасть в водную среду, чтобы не оказаться обедом для некоторых хищников. На самом деле, не многим из них везет и некоторые из них не добираются даже до линии прибоя. Даже тем малышам, которым удалось оказаться в воде, многим не посчастливится, так как их здесь ожидает много сюрпризов, от которых трудно спрятаться.

На первых порах маленьким черепашкам приходится прятаться в морских глубинах, тщательно маскируясь. Рацион питания молодых черепашек состоит  не только из растительной пищи. Они питаются также медузами, моллюсками, ракообразными и планктоном.

Интересно знать! По мере взросления, черепахи начинают перебираться с глубин ближе к береговой зоне. По мере взросления меняется и рацион питания, так как начинает преобладать растительная пища.

Специалистам известно о 10 местах на нашей Планете, где обитают зеленые черепахи. Каждое место обитания характеризуется своими особенностями. Для некоторых мест характерным является кочующий образ жизни, а в некоторых местах черепахи ведут оседлый образ жизни, отдавая предпочтение прибрежному илу, 4который прекрасно подходит для принятия ванн.

Часть ученых за то, чтобы некоторые подвиды зеленых черепах, которые обитают в характерных для них условиях, выделить в отдельные подвиды, что и произошло с австралийскими черепахами.

Сколько живут зеленые черепахи

Первые годы жизни для зеленой черепахи являются самыми опасными, так как молодые особи практически беззащитные против естественных врагов. После появления на свет, многие из них погибают на первых минутах своей жизни, становясь обедом для многих хищников. После того, как у них появляется твердый панцирь, они становятся менее уязвимыми, против природных врагов. Обитая в условиях естественной среды, зеленые черепахи могут прожить до 80 лет, а вот в неволе черепахи живут намного меньше, что является парадоксом. Вся проблема в том, что человеку непросто создать условия обитания, приближенные к естественным условиям.

Подвиды черепахи

Атлантическая зеленая черепаха обитает в пределах береговой зоны Северной Америки, а также в пределах береговой зоны Европы. Характеризуется наличием широкого и плоского панциря.

Тихоокеанская восточная зеленая черепаха встречается в прибрежных водах Калифорнии, Чили, в том числе и в прибрежных водах Аляски. Отличается подвид узким, хотя и высоким панцирем, темного (коричневого с желтым) цвета.

Где обитает зеленая черепаха

Морские зеленые черепахи предпочитают обитать в водах тропиков и субтропиков, а также в водах Тихого и Атлантического океанов. Подобных морских обитателей можно встретить в прибрежных водах Голландии, Великобритании, а также в прибрежных водах юга Африканского континента. Эти рептилии, как и много веков назад, встречаются в береговой зоне Северной и Южной Америки, хотя в наше время, численность этих удивительных морских обитателей значительно меньше. Зеленые черепахи встречаются также и у берегов Австралийского континента.

Важный момент! Комфортные условия обитания зеленой черепахи связаны с глубиной, не больше 10 метров, с достаточным количеством водорослей для пропитания, а также с каменистым дном. На такой глубине хорошо прогревается вода, что и привлекает зеленых черепах, независимо от географического положения данных мест.

Среди камней черепахи прячутся от природных врагов, отдыхают, а пещеры служат домом для черепах на долгие годы. Независимо от того, в какой части Мирового океана обитает черепаха, она безошибочно находит то место, где она появилась на свет, не подозревая, сколько опасностей ожидает ее на этом пути.

Чем питается зеленая черепаха

Появившись на свет, черепашки спешат в толщу воды, чтобы укрыться где-нибудь среди кораллов, морских рифов, а также среди морских водорослей. Обитая в таких условиях, у черепашек повышаются шансы на выживание. Чтобы быстро вырасти, черепашкам необходимо усиленное питание, поэтому их рацион состоит не только из растительности, но и из животной пищи, в виде медуз, моллюсков, ракообразных и червей.

На протяжении 7-10 лет жизни черепах происходит процесс затвердевания панциря. Твердый панцирь – это уже хоть какая то, но гарантия того, что охотников на мясо черепахи становится не так и много. Мало того, черепахи предпочитают покинуть глубоководье, перебравшись как можно ближе к берегу, где более теплая вода и намного больше растительности. Они полностью переходят на питание растительной пищей, когда стают половозрелыми.

Большой интерес для зеленых черепах представляют пастбища, которые находятся на глубине 10 метров и представляют густые заросли талассии и зостеры. Кроме своих излюбленных растений, черепахи употребляют в пищу также и ламинарию. Во времена прилива черепахи появляются невдалеке от берега, начиная поедать зеленую растительность, росшую на берегу.

Размножение и потомство

Перешагнув 10 летний порог своей жизни, черепахи могут размножаться. Отличить самца и самку черепахи можно и до 10 летнего возраста по форме панциря. Панцирь у самцов несколько уже и ниже, при этом у самцов более длинный хвост, величина которого составляет почти 2 десятка сантиметров.

Самцы с самками спариваются в воде. Процесс размножения начинается в январе месяце и продолжается по октябрь месяц. Брачные игры связаны с тем, что оба пола стараются привлечь внимание противоположного пола с помощью уникальных звуков, вроде пения. За самку может сражаться несколько самцов, при этом самку может оплодотворить  несколько самцов, что позволит сделать ей несколько кладок яиц. Процесс спаривания продолжается несколько часов.

Оплодотворение происходит один раз в 3-4 года. После оплодотворения самка отправляется в длительное путешествие, чтобы в определенное время оказаться в определенном месте. Появившись на пляже и выбравшись в ночное время на берег, черепаха роет углубление в песке и откладывает яйца, после чего кладка  засыпается песком.

Интересно знать! Самка откладывает до сотни яиц, после чего ямка засыпается песком и разравнивается. Таким способом она маскирует свою кладку.

За один сезон самка 7 раз откладывает по 50-100 яиц. Большая часть гнезд разоряется, поэтому лишь немногим удается появиться на свет.

Процесс инкубации длится 2 месяца и несколько дней, после чего маленькие черепашки начинают появляться из яиц, пробивая скорлупу. Появившись на свет, малышам придется преодолеть несколько сотен метров, чтобы оказаться в спасительных водах Мирового океана.

С момента своего рождения черепашки самостоятельно борются за свою жизнь, так как самки, отложив яйца, возвращаются обратно в море. Малыши, оказавшись в спасительной воде, самостоятельно плывут, при этом они используют любые водные растения, чтобы зацепиться за них или взобраться вообще на самый верх. В случае опасности они ныряют  и быстро перемещаются на глубину.

Естественные враги

На протяжении первых 10 лет жизни черепаху подстерегает наибольшее количество опасностей. Дальнейшая жизнь черепахи более спокойная и не столь опасная, поскольку ее панцирь не по зубам для многих хищных обитателей морей и океанов, разве что акулы способны справиться с ним. На протяжении тысячелетий зеленая взрослая черепаха практически не имела природных врагов.

Этот вид оказался на грани исчезновения благодаря человеку. У черепахи не только вкусное мясо, но и яйца. Крепкий панцирь служит для изготовления различных поделок. В связи с этим, черепахи подверглись уничтожению и только в начале прошлого столетия ученые поняли, что зеленые черепахи оказались на грани исчезновения.

Черепахи и человек

Большой популярностью пользуются блюда, приготовленные из мяса и яиц черепахи. Кроме этого, высоко ценится сушеное и вяленое мясо, которое подаются в самых дорогих ресторанах. Несмотря на тот факт, что черепахи помогли выжить многим морякам, которые открывали новые территории, человек не оказался благодарным, поэтому оба подвида оказались в Красной книге.

Популяция и статус вида

Еще не так давно, на пляжах, где откладывали яйца черепахи, могли появиться тысячи самок, которые могли отложить сотни тысяч яиц. В наше время на острове Мидуэй откладывают яйца не больше 4-х десятков самок. В других местах ситуация практически такая. Учитывая столь печальный фактор, в середине прошлого столетия появилась программа по восстановлению численности морских черепах, независимо от мест обитания.

Важно знать! Поскольку черепахи занесены в Красную книгу, то в их местах гнездований запрещена охота на черепах, а также добыча яиц. Кроме этого, запрещено вести любую, в том числе и хозяйственную деятельность.

Находясь в заповеднике, туристам запрещено приближаться к черепахам ближе, чем на 100 метров. Яйца, отложенные черепахами, помещаются в инкубаторы, после чего появившихся малышей выпускают в безопасные воды, причем тогда, когда те окрепнут. Программа дала свои результаты и специалисты уверены, что численность зеленых черепах выросла настолько, что внушает надежду на то, что зеленые черепахи в ближайшее время не исчезнут с лица земли.

В заключение

К сожалению, человек предпринимает слишком мало усилий на то, чтобы сохранить живую природу в целости и сохранности для подрастающих поколений. Что касается морских зеленых черепах, то они также требуют более энергичных шагов, иначе человечество увидит этих рептилий только на изображении.

Поймали МОРСКУЮ ЧЕРЕПАХУ Гигантская зеленая морская черепаха Brave Wilderness на русском

  • Энциклопедия
  • Животные
  • Зеленая морская черепаха

Черепахи относятся к отряду пресмыкающихся. Они существуют на земле более 220 миллионов лет. Биологам сегодня известно 230 видов черепах.

Черепахи делятся на:

  • морских,
  • наземных.

Наземные черепахи делятся на:

  • сухопутных,
  • пресноводных.

Зеленая морская черепаха – самый крупный вид морских черепах. Обитает она только в теплых морях, то есть во всех тропических и субтропических. Является не опасной для человека.

Свое название зеленая черепаха получила благодаря своему гладкому панцирю темно-зеленого цвета. Вес такой черепахи составляет 200 кг, но попадаются особи, вес которых составляет 450 кг. В длину зеленая черепаха достигает от 75 см до 150 см.

Если у черепах наземных панцирь плоский, то у зеленой морской черепахи он куполообразный. Брюшко желтого цвета.

Зубов у зеленой морской черепахи нет, поэтому всю пищу она перетирает челюстями. Питается в основном водорослями и морской травой.

Передние лапы у морской черепахи длиннее задних. Втянуть их под панцирь она не может, а голову может.

Откладывают яйца самка зеленой черепахи на песчаном берегу. Обычно это берега о-в Карибского моря, о.Вознесения, на Коста-Рике и Цейлоне. Задними лапами она роет ямку и туда откладывает 100-110 яиц. Потом она засыпает яйца песком, что бы их не нашли звери и люди, а так же с целью защиты от прямых солнечных лучей. От того, какая будет температура окружающего воздуха, зависит, кто вылупится из яйца – самка или самец. Если температура воздуха 30оС, то в половине яиц будут самки, а во второй половине — самцы. Если температура воздуха будет 28оС, то во всех яйцах будут только самцы. Если температура воздуха будет 32оС, то во всех яйцах будут только самки. Через 2 месяца из яиц появляются черепашки. Они сами инстинктивно ползут к морю.

Живет зеленая морская черепаха в среднем 80 лет. Однако не все особи достигают этого возраста. Много черепашек погибают, когда перебегают от кладки, где они вылупились, к морю. На этом пути они являются легкой добычей для грызунов, змей и чаек.

Но, в основном, человек является виновным в гибели зеленой черепахи. Из-за вкусовых качеств ее отлавливают и употребляют в пищу. За это она имеет другое название — «суповая черепаха». В пищу так же употребляют и ее яйца. Так же много черепах гибнет по причине загрязнения окружающей среды. Так, пакеты, плавающие в водах, напоминают черепахам водоросли. Они их съедают и умирают.

Доклад Зеленая морская черепаха

В водах мирового океана обитает интересная зеленая черепаха. Она имеет огромные размеры, но это совсем не делает ее страшной и злой. Зеленая черепаха совсем безобидна. Она лишь живет, плавает в воде и ищет себе пищу. Самцов отличает от самок лишь длинный хвост. Кроме этого особых отличий у них не наблюдается. Зеленые черепахи предпочитают откладывать яйца на Карибских островах, на Цейлоне или же на острове Вознесения. Ради этого они могут преодолеть огромные расстояния, чтобы оставить яйца на берегу. Черепахи приплывают к берегам, дожидаются ночи и выползают из воды. В песке они роют глубокую ямку, в которую и откладывают много яиц. Этот процесс занимает у них всего лишь час. Потом они хорошо прячут свои яйца, закапывая ямку, и возвращаются в море. Чаще всего для того чтобы отложить яйца, черепахи выбирают те места, где сами появились на свет. Совершая такой тяжелый маршрут, черепахи стараются сохранить свое потомство, они думают, что люди там их не найдут. Но из-за того, что люди всегда находили кладки черепашьих яиц, да и охотились на самих зеленых черепах из-за вкусного мяса, эти черепахи уменьшаются в количестве с каждым годом.

Вообще зеленая черепаха удивительное создание. У нее нет зубов, но она умудряется добывать себе пищу, пережевывая ее своей твердой челюстью. Панцирь этих черепах немного приплюснут, это дает им преимущество хорошо перемещаться в воде. Зеленые черепахи предпочитают плавать в прибрежных зонах. Там отличные для них места, но самое главное, всегда есть корм. Зеленые черепахи любят водоросли и морскую траву. Иногда они делают себе праздник и находят медуз или моллюсков. Молодые черепашки, которые появляются с отложенных яиц, сразу спешат попасть в воду. Но там для них грозит много опасности. Они ведь еще маленькие и хрупкие, поэтому становятся отличной добычей для акул и других хищных рыб. Черепашки питаются первые 5 лет только червями, ракообразными и моллюсками. Только когда они подрастают, могут перейти на растительный корм. Зеленые черепахи никому не приносят вред, наоборот, своим присутствием они дополняют моря и океаны, а люди так бездумно их уничтожают. Если не остановить это, то зеленых черепах может и не стать совсем. Для таких черепах создаются заповедники, их гнезда бережно охраняются. На них нельзя охотиться и уничтожать их яйца, за этим следят специалисты. Вылупившихся черепашек выпускают в безопасные воды. Может такое отношение все же спасет зеленых черепах. 

2, 3, 4 класс из красной книги

Зеленая морская черепаха

Зеленая морская черепаха

В настоящее время, к сожалению, очень много животных занесены в Красную книгу (она содержит в себе список исчезающих или исчезнувших обитателей животного мира и растений). Те существа, которые включены в эту книгу нуждаются в особой защите.

Среди редких, находящихся на грани вымирания — зелёная морская черепаха.

Зелёная морская черепаха — доклад.

Зелёные морские черепахи — прекрасны и беззащитны.

Общие сведения

Зелёная морская черепаха, иногда ее называют ещё и суповой (из-за того, что из них готовят деликатесный суп) — вторая по величине из всех видов черепах. Её панцирь может достигать в ширину до двух метров, а вес — практически до 500 кг, хотя такие крупные экземпляры довольно редки.

Панцирь у зелёной морской черепахи овальный, состоящий из плотно прилегающих к друг другу щитков, её же окрас зависит от того, где родилось пресмыкающееся и в каких условиях проживает; цвет может быть оливковым или темно-коричневым с вкраплениями жёлтых и белых пятен.  Конечности представляют собой ласты с одним когтем, необходимым для маневренности при плавании. Голова небольшая с большими глазами миндалевидной формы и ртом, в котором нет зубов только крепкая челюсть.

Обитает черепаха в основном в тропиках и в субтропиках, в тёплых водах Атлантического и Тихого океана, где растет её основная пища — морские водоросли. Первые годы жизни питается моллюсками, медузами и мелкими рыбками. В поисках своего пропитания животное может оставаться до 5 часов на глубине, при этом не выныривая.

Зелёная морская черепаха, в зависимости от того, рядом с каким океаном она обитает, имеет подвиды:

  • Атлантическая зелёная черепаха (обитает в основном в береговой зоне Северной Америки, встречается и в Африке). Имеет широкий и плоский панцирь.
  • Восточная или тихоокеанская зеленая черепаха (обитает у островов Океании — скопления островков центральной и западной части Тихого океана.) Оснащена узким и «надутым» вверх панцирем темного цвета.

Характер зелёной черепахи и её образ жизни.

Эти пресмыкающиеся, чаще всего, одиночки, предпочитают уединение, встретить их небольшой группкой можно лишь во время воспроизведения потомства. Зеленые чёрепахи неагрессивные и доверчивые морские обитатели, которые любят проводить время в прибрежных зонах, на глубину чаще всего плывут для поиска пропитания и, как это не странно, в первые годы жизни.

Черепашонок.

Какой милый детёныш!

На свет черепашки появляются из яиц, отложенных самкой в ночное время. В кладке обычно бывает около ста яичек, в сезон размножения самка откладывает до пяти таких кладок. Сами черепашки появляются на свет через два-три месяца, далеко не все из них выживают, очень часто ещё до вылупления они становятся кормом для грызунов, змей и птиц. Те, из них, что добираются до воды, стараются уйти на глубину и там замаскироваться, прячась от тех морских обитателей, которые могут их съесть.

В первые годы, черепахи практически беззащитны, только после появления твёрдого панциря они становятся менее уязвимыми. Продолжительность жизни на свободе — примерно 80 лет, в неволе намного меньше, поскольку очень сложно воссоздать условия их естественной среды обитания.

Почему животное оказалось Красной книге

Под угрозу вымирания зелёная морская черепаха попала по вине человека. Яйца и мясо пресмыкающихся считалось и до сих пор считается деликатесом, а из панциря очень любили делать сувениры и украшения, что вызывало массовое браконьерство. Вылавливать и убивать этих животных не составляло труда, так как они по натуре доверчивые и неопасливые.

В XX веке люди наконец опомнились и забили тревогу, осознав, что черепахи находятся на грани исчезновения. Сейчас, после помещения этих животных в Красную книгу, ведётся работа по увеличению числа популяции.

Работа экологов черепашьей кладкой.

Задача экологов — сохранить вид и увеличить популяцию.

Так, часто отложенные яйца помещают в инкубатор, где они вылупляются и крепнут и только потом их отправляют в свою среду обитания. А в заповедниках, туристам грозит штраф при приближении к ним ближе, чем на сто метров.

Заключение

Зелёная морская черепаха — красивое и дружелюбное животное, нужно предпринимать все меры, чтобы этот вид продолжал украшать нашу планету.

Эта информация будет полезной при подготовке сообщения к уроку окружающего мира в 4 классе о животном из Красной книги.

Зеленая морская черепаха (доклад, 4 класс)

Опубликовано: 4 ноября 2016 года

Среди диких видов черепах — зеленая морская черепаха известна людям лучше всего. Секрет ее популярности вовсе не в красоте или распространенности, а в том, что мясо этой черепахи не только съедобно, но и очень приятно на вкус.  Многие слышали такое словосочетание — «черепаховый суп». Так вот этот суп готовят из зеленой морской черепахи.

Среди других морских черепах это морское животное выделяется своим размером. Взрослая зеленая морская черепаха весит больше 200 килограммов, а ее длина от носа до кончика хвоста может достигать полутора метров. Из под гигантского панциря у черепахи торчат только голова, хвост и ластообразные ноги. При этом, в отличие от других видов черепах, зеленая морская черепаха не может прятаться в панцире.

Несмотря на говорящее название этого вида черепах, зеленая черепаха далеко не всегда имеет зеленую окраску. Чаще всего панцирь черепахи окрашен в желто-коричневый или оливковый цвет со светлыми пятнами.

Места обитания зеленой морской черепахи разбросаны по всей земле. Ее можно увидеть у побережья США и стран Южной Америки, встречается она в водах, омывающих Австралию и северную часть Европы.

Питаются черепахи как растительной пищей, так и небольшими морскими обитателями — некрупными медузами, моллюсками, мелкой рыбешкой.

Размножаются черепахи откладывая кладку яиц на песок морского побережья. Обычно кладка состоит из одной или двух сотен яиц, но не все вылупившиеся малыши смогут вырасти до взрослого состояния. Многих из них поймают и съедят хищные птицы и другие морские обитатели сразу после вылупления.

Использование мяса зеленой морской черепахи в пищу не лучшим образом сказалось на размерах ее популяции. Массовый отлов этого вида морских животных привел к тому, что такие черепахи оказались под угрозой исчезновения и их пришлось включить в перечень выпирающих видов. Сейчас охота на зеленую морскую черепаху запрещена.

«Green turtle» redirects here. For the comic book character, see Green Turtle (comics).

«Chelonia» redirects here. For the synonym of the order Testudines, see Turtle.

Green sea turtle
Green turtle swimming over coral reefs in Kona.jpg
A green sea turtle swimming above a Hawaiian coral reef

Conservation status


Endangered (IUCN 3.1)[1]

CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]

Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Chelonioidea
Family: Cheloniidae
Subfamily: Cheloniinae
Genus: Chelonia
Brongniart, 1800
Species:

C. mydas

Binomial name
Chelonia mydas

(Linnaeus, 1758)

Synonyms[3]

Species synonymy

  • Testudo mydas
    Linnaeus, 1758
  • Testudo macropus
    Walbaum, 1782
    (nomen illegitimum)
  • Testudo viridis
    Schneider, 1783
  • Testudo japonica
    Thunberg, 1787
  • Testudo marina vulgaris
    Lacépède, 1788
  • Testudo viridisquamosa
    Lacépède, 1788
  • Testudo mydas macropus
    Suckow, 1798
  • Chelonia mydas
    — Brongniart, 1800
  • Testudo chloronotos
    Bechstein, 1800
  • Testudo cepediana
    Daudin, 1801
  • Testudo rugosa
    Daudin, 1801
  • Chelone mydas
    — Brongniart, 1805
  • Chelonia japonica
    — Schweigger, 1812
  • Chelonia virgata
    Schweigger, 1812
  • Caretta cepedii
    Merrem, 1820
  • Caretta esculenta
    Merrem, 1820
  • Caretta thunbergii
    Merrem, 1820
  • Caretta mydas
    — Fitzinger, 1826
  • Caretta virgata
    — Fitzinger, 1826
  • Chelonia lachrymata
    Cuvier, 1829
  • Chelonia maculosa
    Cuvier, 1829
  • Chelonia midas [sic]
    Wagler, 1830
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas var. japonica
    — Gray, 1831
  • Chelonia esculenta
    — Wiegmann & Ruthe, 1832
  • Chelonia bicarinata
    Lesson, 1834
  • Chelonia marmorata
    A.M.C. Duméril & Bibron, 1835
  • Chelonia (Chelonia)
    cepedeana [sic]
    Fitzinger, 1835
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia viridis
    — Temminck & Schlegel, 1835
  • Mydas mydas
    — Cocteau, 1838
  • Mydasea mydas
    — Gervais, 1843
  • Euchelonia mydas
    — Tschudi, 1846
  • Megemys mydas
    — Gistel, 1848
  • Chelonia lacrymata [sic]
    Agassiz, 1857
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia formosa
    Girard, 1858
  • Chelonia tenuis
    Girard, 1858
  • Euchelys macropus
    — Girard, 1858
  • Chelone macropus
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone maculosa
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone marmorata
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone virgata
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone viridis
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelonia albiventer
    Nardo, 1864
  • Thalassiochelys albiventer
    — Günther, 1865
  • Chelonia agassizii
    Bocourt, 1868
  • Mydas viridis
    — Gray, 1870
  • Chelone midas
    — Cope, 1871
  • Chelonia lata
    Philippi, 1887
  • Chelone mydas
    — Boulenger, 1889
  • Chelonia mydas mydas
    — Mertens & L. Müller, 1928
  • Caretta thunbergi [sic]
    H.M. Smith, 1931
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas agassizii
    — Carr, 1952
  • Chelonia mydas agassizi [sic]
    Schmidt, 1953
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas carrinegra
    Caldwell, 1962
  • Chelonia agazisii [sic]
    Tamayo, 1962
    (ex errore)
  • Testudo nigrita
    Tamayo, 1962
  • Chelonia agassizi
    — Carr, 1967
  • Chelonia mydus [sic]
    Nutaphand, 1979
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas carinegra [sic]
    Nutaphand, 1979
    (ex errore)
  • Testudo chloronotus [sic]
    H.M. Smith & R.B. Smith, 1980
    (ex errore)
  • Chelone albiventer
    — Márquez, 1990
  • Caretta thumbergii [sic]
    Sharma, 1998
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas viridis
    — Karl & Bowen, 1999

The green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas), also known as the green turtle, black (sea) turtle or Pacific green turtle,[4] is a species of large sea turtle of the family Cheloniidae. It is the only species in the genus Chelonia.[5] Its range extends throughout tropical and subtropical seas around the world, with two distinct populations in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, but it is also found in the Indian Ocean.[6][7] The common name refers to the usually green fat found beneath its carapace, not to the color of its carapace, which is olive to black.

The dorsoventrally flattened body of C. mydas is covered by a large, teardrop-shaped carapace; it has a pair of large, paddle-like flippers. It is usually lightly colored, although in the eastern Pacific populations, parts of the carapace can be almost black. Unlike other members of its family, such as the hawksbill sea turtle, C. mydas is mostly herbivorous. The adults usually inhabit shallow lagoons, feeding mostly on various species of seagrasses.[8] The turtles bite off the tips of the blades of seagrass, which keeps the grass healthy.

Like other sea turtles, green sea turtles migrate long distances between feeding grounds and hatching beaches. Many islands worldwide are known as Turtle Island due to green sea turtles nesting on their beaches. Females crawl out on beaches, dig nests, and lay eggs during the night. Later, hatchlings emerge, and scramble into the water. Those that reach maturity may live to 90 years in the wild.[6]

C. mydas is listed as endangered by the IUCN and CITES and is protected from exploitation in most countries.[9] It is illegal to collect, harm, or kill them. In addition, many countries have laws and ordinances to protect nesting areas. However, turtles are still in danger due to human activity. In some countries, turtles and their eggs are still hunted for food. Pollution indirectly harms turtles at both population and individual scales. Many turtles die after being caught in fishing nets. In addition, real estate development often causes habitat loss by eliminating nesting beaches.

Taxonomy[edit]

The green sea turtle is a member of the tribe Cheloniini.[10] A 1993 study clarified the status of genus Chelonia with respect to the other marine turtles. The carnivorous Eretmochelys (hawksbill), Caretta (loggerhead) and Lepidochelys (ridley) were assigned to the tribe Carettini. Herbivorous Chelonia warranted their status as a genus, while Natator (flatback) was further removed from the other genera than previously believed.[11]

The species was originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae as Testudo mydas.[12] In 1868, Marie Firmin Bocourt named a particular species of sea turtle Chelonia agassizii,[13][14] in honor of Swiss-American zoologist Louis Agassiz.[15] This «species» was referred to as the «black sea turtle».[16] Later research determined Bocourt’s «black sea turtle» was not genetically distinct from C. mydas, and thus taxonomically not a separate species.[17] These two «species» were then united as Chelonia mydas and populations were given subspecies status: C. mydas mydas referred to the originally described population, while C. mydas agassizi referred only to the Pacific population known as the Galápagos green turtle.[18][19] This subdivision was later determined to be invalid and all species members were then designated Chelonia mydas.[5] The oft-mentioned name C. agassizi remains an invalid junior synonym of C. mydas.

The species’ common name does not derive from any particular green external coloration of the turtle. Its name comes from the greenish color of the turtles’ fat, which is only found in a layer between their inner organs and their shell.[20] As a species found worldwide, the green turtle has many local names. In the Hawaiian language it is called honu,[21][22] and it is locally known as a symbol of good luck and longevity.[23]

  • Green sea turtle swimming over the sand plateau at playa Grandi, Curaçao

    Green sea turtle swimming over the sand plateau at playa Grandi, Curaçao

  • Photo of turtle walking on beach

  • Green sea turtle

    Green sea turtle

  • Coming up for a breath

    Coming up for a breath

Description[edit]

Drawing of turtle carapace and plastron showing respectively, vertebral, costal, marginal, and supracaudal and intergular, gular, pectoral, abdominal, humeral, femoral, anal, axillary (anterior inframarginal), and inguinal (posterior inframarginal) shields

Taxidermied shell of Chelonia mydas

Its appearance is that of a typical sea turtle. C. mydas has a dorsoventrally flattened body, a beaked head at the end of a short neck, and paddle-like arms well-adapted for swimming.[24] Adult green turtles grow to 1.5 metres (5 ft) long.[25] The average weight of mature individuals is 68–190 kg (150–419 lb) and the average carapace length is 78–112 cm (31–44 in).[26] Exceptional specimens can weigh 315 kg (694 lb) or even more, with the largest known C. mydas having weighed 395 kg (871 lb) and measured 153 cm (60 in) in carapace length.[27]

Anatomically, a few characteristics distinguish the green turtle from the other members of its family. Unlike its close relative the hawksbill turtle, the green turtle’s snout is very short and its beak is unhooked. The neck cannot be pulled into the shell.[28] The sheath of the turtle’s upper jaw possesses a denticulated edge, while its lower jaw has stronger, serrated, more defined denticulation. The dorsal surface of the turtle’s head has a single pair of prefrontal scales. Its carapace is composed of five central scutes flanked by four pairs of lateral scutes. Underneath, the green turtle has four pairs of inframarginal scutes covering the area between the turtle’s plastron and its shell. Mature C. mydas front appendages have only a single claw (as opposed to the hawksbill two), although a second claw is sometimes prominent in young specimens.[29]

The carapace of the turtle has various color patterns that change over time. Hatchlings of Chelonia mydas, like those of other marine turtles, have mostly black carapaces and light-colored plastrons. Carapaces of juveniles turn dark brown to olive, while those of mature adults are either entirely brown, spotted or marbled with variegated rays. Underneath, the turtle’s plastron is hued yellow. C. mydas limbs are dark-colored and lined with yellow, and are usually marked with a large dark brown spot in the center of each appendage.[6][30]

Distribution[edit]

Green sea turtle nesting populations

The range of the green sea turtle extends throughout tropical and subtropical oceans worldwide. The two major subpopulations are the Atlantic and the eastern Pacific subpopulations. Each population is genetically distinct, with its own set of nesting and feeding grounds within the population’s known range.[6] One of the genetic differences between the two subpopulations is the type of mitochondrial DNA found in individual’s cells. Individuals from rookeries in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea have a similar type of mitochondrial DNA, and individuals from the Pacific and Indian Oceans have another type of mitochondrial DNA.[31] Their native range includes tropical to subtropical waters along continental coasts and islands between 30°N and 30°S. Since green sea turtles are a migrating species, their global distribution spans into the open ocean. The differences in mitochondrial DNA more than likely stems from the populations being isolated from each other by the southern tips of both South America and Africa with no warm waters for the green sea turtles to migrate through. The green sea turtle is estimated to inhabit coastal areas of more than 140 countries, with nesting sites in over 80 countries worldwide throughout the year. In the United States Atlantic coast, green sea turtles can be found from Texas and north to Massachusetts. In the United States Pacific coast, they have been found from southern California north to the southernmost tip of Alaska. The largest populations of green sea turtles within the United States coastline are in the Hawaiian Islands and Florida. Globally, the largest populations of sea turtles are in the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, and the Caribbean Sea.[32]

Atlantic subpopulation[edit]

The green sea turtle can generally be found throughout the Atlantic Ocean. Although the species is most abundant in tropical climates, green sea turtles can also be found in temperate climates, and individuals have been spotted as far north as Canada in the western Atlantic, and the British Isles in the east. The subpopulation’s southern range is known until past the southern tip of Africa in the east and Argentina in the western Atlantic. The major nesting sites can be found on various islands in the Caribbean, along the Atlantic coast of Florida in the United States, the eastern coast of the South American continent and most notably, on isolated North Atlantic islands.

In the Caribbean, major nesting sites have been identified on Aves Island, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, and Costa Rica. In recent years, there are signs of increased nesting in the Cayman Islands.[33] One of the region’s most important nesting grounds is in Tortuguero in Costa Rica.[34] In fact, the majority of the Caribbean region’s C. mydas population hails from a few beaches in Tortuguero.[35] Within United States waters, minor nesting sites have been noted in the states of Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Florida’s east coast is the largest nesting site in the United States. Hutchinson Island in particular is a major nesting area in Florida waters. Florida has several annual nesting periods when local beaches are closed or cordoned off to protect nesting sites. According to Green Sea Turtle Watch, in 2015 more than 37,000 green sea turtle nests were documented in Florida, a record number. In addition to sporadic distribution of nesting sites, feeding grounds are much more widely distributed throughout Florida. Important feeding grounds in Florida include Indian River Lagoon, the Florida Keys, Florida Bay, Homosassa, Crystal River, and Cedar Key.[24][36]

Notable locations in South America include secluded beaches in Suriname and French Guiana.[37] In the Southern Atlantic Ocean, the most notable nesting grounds for Chelonia mydas are found on the island of Ascension,[24] hosts 6,000–13,000 turtle nests.[38][39][40]

Indo-Pacific subpopulation[edit]

Photo of turtle swimming towards surface with diver in background

About to break the surface for air at Kona, Hawaii

In the Pacific, its range reaches as far north as the southern coast of Alaska and as far south as Chile in the east. The turtle’s distribution in the western Pacific reaches north to Japan and southern parts of Russia’s Pacific coast, and as far south as the northern tip of New Zealand and a few islands south of Tasmania. Significant nesting grounds are scattered throughout the entire Pacific region, including Mexico, the Hawaiian Islands, the South Pacific, the northern coast of Australia, and Southeast Asia. Major Indian Ocean nesting colonies include India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and other coastal countries.[41]

The turtles can also be found throughout the Indian Ocean; the east coast of the African continent hosts a few nesting grounds, including islands in the waters around Madagascar.[41]

Specific nesting grounds[edit]

Nesting grounds are found all along the Mexican coast. These turtles feed in seagrass pastures in the Gulf of California.[42] Green turtles belonging to the distinct Hawaiian subpopulation nest at the protected French Frigate Shoals some 800 kilometers (500 mi) west of the Hawaiian Islands.[22]

In the Philippines, green turtles nest in the Turtle Islands along with closely related hawksbill turtles.[43]
In December 2007, fishermen using a hulbot-hulbot (a type of fish net) accidentally caught an 80 kg (180 lb), 93 cm (37 in) long and 82 cm (32 in) wide turtle off Barangay Bolong, Zamboanga City, Philippines. December is breeding season near the Bolong beach.[44]

Indonesia has a few nesting beaches, one in the Meru Betiri National Reserve in East Java.[45]

Off the north-eastern and northern coasts of Australia, the Great Barrier Reef has two genetically distinct populations; one north and one south. Within the reef, 20 separate locations consisting of small islands and cays were identified as nesting sites for either population of C. mydas. Of these, the most important is on Raine Island.[46][47] In the Torres Strait there is a large rookery on Bramble Cay.[48][49] The Coral Sea has nesting areas of world significance.[50]

Major nesting sites are common on either side of the Arabian Sea, both in Ash Sharqiyah, Oman, and along the coast of Karachi, Pakistan. Some specific beaches there, such as Hawke’s Bay and Sandspit, are common to both C. mydas and L. olivacea subpopulation. Sandy beaches along Sindh and Balochistan are nesting sites. Some 25 kilometers (16 mi) off the Pakistani coast, Astola island is another nesting beach.[8][51][52]

Galápagos green turtle[edit]

Green Sea Turtle Swimming in the Galápagos

The population that has often been known as the Galápagos green turtle have been recorded and observed in the Galápagos as far back as the 17th century by William Dampier.[53] Not much attention has been paid to them due to the overwhelming research done on the Galápagos giant tortoises.[54] Only over the last 30 years have extensive studies been performed covering the behaviors of the Galápagos green turtles. Much of the debate that has surrounded them recently is over the binomial classification of the species.[55] At one point the name Chelonia agassizii was applied to this population as a separate species.[17] Analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA of 15 nesting beaches,[55] however, has demonstrated that there is not only no significant distinction of this population but that it would be paraphyletic to recognise it. As such the species name Chelonia agassizzii is considered a junior synonym of Chelonia mydas [55] as such it is considered as a local variant of the populations of the East Pacific waters and those of other nesting areas.[55]

The morphological distinctiveness of the Galápagos green turtle has given rise to the debate,[17] but evidence of taxonomic distinctiveness is best served using the combination of multiple datasets. The two most notable morphological distinctions are the considerably smaller adult size and the much darker pigmentation of the carapace, plastron, and extremities.[17] Other distinctions are the curving of the carapace above each hind flipper, the more dome-shaped carapace, and the very long tail of adult males.[56]
Three possibilities have arisen from their unique characteristics: agassizii is a separate species from C. mydas, it is a subspecies of green sea turtle, or it is simply a color mutation.[56] These facts have led to the debate over binomial separation however due to the significance of the DNA testing results there have been no distinctions made at this time.[55] At a meeting for sea turtle scientists and their collaborators in 2000, the evidence for the taxonomic position of the Galápagos green turtle was reviewed and a majority among the participants supported treating it as a population or subspecies of the green turtle (instead of a separate species).[57] However, this is possibly a case of political taxonomy. As such the three major international checklists that cover turtles of the world Reptile Database[58] the checklist of Fritz and Havas (2007)[3] and the IUCN Checklist (TTWG 2017)[59] all consider this a junior synonym.

Habitat[edit]

Green sea turtles move across three habitat types, depending on their life stage. They lay eggs on beaches. Mature turtles spend most of their time in shallow, coastal waters with lush seagrass beds. Adults frequent inshore bays, lagoons, and shoals with lush seagrass meadows. Entire generations often migrate between one pair of feeding and nesting areas.[24] Green sea turtles, Chelonia mydas, are classified as an aquatic species and are distributed around the globe in warm tropical to subtropical waters. The environmental parameter that limits the distribution of the turtles is ocean temperatures below 7 to 10 degrees Celsius.[60] Within their geographical range, the green sea turtles generally stay near continental and island coastlines. Near the coastlines, the green sea turtles live within shallow bays and protected shores. In these protected shores and bays, the green sea turtle habitats include coral reefs, salt marshes, and nearshore seagrass beds. The coral reefs provide red, brown, and green algae for their diet and give protection from predators and rough storms within the ocean. The salt marshes and seagrass beds contain seaweed and grass vegetation, allowing ample habitat for the sea turtles.[32]

Turtles spend most of their first five years in convergence zones within the bare open ocean that surround them.[8][61] These young turtles are rarely seen as they swim in deep, pelagic waters.[62][63] Green sea turtles typically swim at 2.5–3 km/h (1.6–1.9 mph).[64]

Ecology and behavior[edit]

Turtle swimming toward surface

As one of the first sea turtle species studied, much of what is known of sea turtle ecology comes from studies of green turtles. The ecology of C. mydas changes drastically with each stage of its life history. Newly emerged hatchlings are carnivorous, pelagic organisms, part of the open ocean mininekton. In contrast, immature juveniles and adults are commonly found in seagrass meadows closer inshore as herbivorous grazers.

Diet[edit]

Green sea turtle grazing on seagrass

The diet of green turtles changes with age.[65] Juveniles are carnivorous, but as they mature they become omnivorous.[66] Young sea turtles eat fish eggs, sea hare eggs, hydrozoans, bryozoans,[67] molluscs, jellyfish, small invertebrates, worms, sponges, algae, and crustaceans.[68][32] Green sea turtles have a relatively slow growth rate because of the low nutritional value of their diet. Body fat turns green because of the consumed vegetation.[66] This diet shift has an effect on the green turtle’s skull morphology.[69] Their serrated jaw helps them chew green and red[70] algae (such as filamentous red alga (Bostrychia), red moss (Caloglossa), freshwater red algae (Compsopogon), lobster horns (Polysiphonia), sea lettuce (Ulva lactuca), green seaweed (Gayralia), and crinkle grass (Rhizoclonium))[71] and sea grasses.[72] They also consume large quantities of wetland plants such as Avicennia schaueriana and Sporobolus alterniflorus, which are commonly found in salt marshes.[73] Most adult sea turtles are strictly herbivorous.[66]

Predators and parasites[edit]

Only human beings and the larger sharks feed on C. mydas adults. Specifically, tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier) hunt adults in Hawaiian waters.[74] Juveniles and new hatchlings have significantly more predators, including crabs, small marine mammals and shorebirds.[6] Additionally, their eggs are vulnerable to predation by scavengers like red foxes and golden jackals.[75]

Green sea turtles have a variety of parasites including barnacles, leeches, protozoans, cestodes, and nematodes. Barnacles attach to the carapace, and leeches to the flippers and skin of the turtles, causing damage to the soft tissues and leading to blood loss. Protozoans, cestodes and nematodes lead to many turtle deaths because of the infections in the liver and intestinal tract they cause. The greatest disease threat to the turtle population is fibropapilloma, which produces lethal tumor growth on scales, lungs, stomach, and kidneys. Fibropapilloma is caused by a herpesvirus that is transmitted by leeches such as Ozobranchus branchiatus, a species of leech which feeds almost entirely on green sea turtles.[60][76]

Life cycle[edit]

Photo of newly hatched turtle held in human hand

Green sea turtles migrate long distances between feeding sites and nesting sites; some swim more than 2,600 kilometres (1,600 mi) to reach their spawning grounds. Beaches in Southeast Asia, India, islands in the western Pacific, and Central America are where green sea turtles breed.[7] Mature turtles often return to the exact beach from which they hatched. Females usually mate every two to four years. Males, on the other hand, visit the breeding areas every year, attempting to mate.[77] Mating seasons vary between populations. For most C. mydas in the Caribbean, mating season is from June to September.[24] The French Guiana nesting subpopulation nests from March to June.[37] In the tropics, green turtles nest throughout the year, although some subpopulations prefer particular times of the year. In Pakistan, Indian Ocean turtles nest year-round, but prefer the months of July to December.[51]

Sea turtles return to the beaches on which they were born to lay their own eggs. The reason for returning to native beaches may be that it guarantees the turtles an environment that has the necessary components for their nesting to be successful. These include a sandy beach, easy access for the hatchlings to get to the ocean, the right incubation temperatures, and low probability of predators that may feed on their eggs. Over time these turtles have evolved these tendencies to return to an area that has provided reproductive success for many generations. Their ability to return to their birthplace is known as natal homing.[78] The males also return to their birthplaces in order to mate. These males that return to their homes know they will be able to find mates because the females born there also return to breed. By doing this, the green sea turtles are able to improve their reproductive success and is why they are willing to expend the energy to travel thousands of miles across the ocean in order to reproduce.

Mating behaviour is similar to other marine turtles. Female turtles control the process. A few populations practice polyandry, although this does not seem to benefit hatchlings.[79] After mating in the water, the female moves above the beach’s high tide line, where she digs a hole 11-22 inches in depth with her hind flippers and deposits her eggs. The hole is then covered up again.[80] Clutch size ranges between 85 and 200, depending on the age of the female. This process takes about an hour to an hour and a half. After the nest is completely covered, she returns to the sea. The female will do this 3 to 5 times in one season.[7]

The eggs are round and white, and about 45 mm in diameter. The hatchlings remain buried for days until they all emerge together at night.[80] The temperature of the nest determines the sex of the turtles at around the 20-40 day mark.[81] At around 50 to 70 days,[82] the eggs hatch during the night, and the hatchlings instinctively head directly into the water. This is the most dangerous time in a turtle’s life. As they walk, predators, such as gulls and crabs, feed on them. A significant percentage never make it to the ocean. Little is known of the initial life history of newly hatched sea turtles.[24] Juveniles spend three to five years in the open ocean before they settle as still-immature juveniles into their permanent shallow-water lifestyle.[62][63] It is speculated that they take twenty to fifty years to reach sexual maturity. Individuals live up to eighty years in the wild.[6] It is estimated that only 1% of hatchlings reach sexual maturity.

Each year on Ascension Island in the South Atlantic, C. mydas females create 6,000 to 25,000 nests. They are among the largest green turtles in the world; many are more than a metre in length and weigh up to 300 kilograms (660 lb).[83]

Breathing and sleep[edit]

Sea turtles spend almost all their lives submerged, but must breathe air for the oxygen needed to meet the demands of vigorous activity. With a single explosive exhalation and rapid inhalation, sea turtles can quickly replace the air in their lungs. The lungs permit a rapid exchange of oxygen and prevent gases from being trapped during deep dives. Sea turtle blood can deliver oxygen efficiently to body tissues even at the pressures encountered during diving. During routine activity, green and loggerhead turtles dive for about four to five minutes, and surface to breathe for one to three seconds.

Turtles can rest or sleep underwater for several hours at a time, but submergence time is much shorter while diving for food or to escape predators. Breath-holding ability is affected by activity and stress, which is why turtles quickly drown in shrimp trawlers and other fishing gear.[29] During the night while sleeping and to protect themselves from potential predators, the adults wedge themselves under rocks below the surface and under ledges in reefs and coastal rocks. Many green sea turtles have been observed in returning to the same sleeping location night after night.[32]

Physiology and sensory modalities[edit]

Green sea turtles tend to have good vision, well adapted to a life at sea. The turtles can see many colors, but are most sensitive to light from violet to yellow or wavelengths of 400 to 600 nanometers. They do not see many colors in the orange to red portion of the light spectrum. On land, however, the sea turtles are nearsighted because the lenses in the eyes are spherical and adjusted to refraction underwater.[32] Sea turtles have no external ear and only one ear bone, called the columella. With one ear bone, the turtles can hear only low frequency sounds, from 200 to 700 Hz. Sounds can also be detected through vibrations of the head, backbone, and shell. The nose of the turtle has two external openings and connects to the roof of the mouth through internal openings. The lower surface of the nasal passage has two sets of sensory cells called the Jacobson’s organ. The turtle can use this organ to smell by pumping water in and out of its nose.[60]

Since green sea turtles migrate long distances during breeding seasons, they have special adaptive systems in order to navigate. In the open ocean, the turtles navigate using wave directions, sun light, and temperatures. The sea turtles also contain an internal magnetic compass. They can detect magnetic information by using magnetic forces acting on the magnetic crystals in their brains. Through these crystals, they can sense the intensity of Earth’s magnetic field and are able to make their way back to their nesting grounds or preferred feeding grounds.[60]

Natal homing is an animal’s ability to return to its birthplace in order to reproduce. Natal homing is found in all species of sea turtles and in other animals such as salmon. How these turtles are able to return to their birthplace is an interesting phenomenon. Many researchers believe that sea turtles use a process called imprinting, which is a special type of learning that occurs when turtles first hatch that allows them to recognize their native beach. There are two types of imprinting that are thought to be the reason turtles can find these beaches. The first is the chemical imprinting hypothesis. This hypothesis states that much like salmon, sea turtles are able to use olfactory cues and senses to smell their way home. However, a problem with this hypothesis is that some turtles travel thousands of miles to return to their native beaches, and the scents from that area aren’t likely to travel and be distinguishable from that distance.
The second hypothesis is the geomagnetic. This hypothesis states that as it hatches, a young turtle will imprint on the magnetic field of the beach they are born on. This hypothesis strongly correlates to the method which sea turtles use to navigate the earth.[78]

In order to tolerate the constant heat loss in the water, sea turtles have the ability to shunt blood away from tissues that are tolerant of low oxygen levels toward the heart, brain, and central nervous system. Other mechanisms include basking on warm beaches and producing heat through their activity and movements of their muscles. Basking turtles sometimes look like they are crying because behind the turtles eye is the lachrymal gland which stores excess salt from the sea water, which then expels through the turtles eye. In the winter months, turtles living at higher latitudes can hibernate for a short period in the mud.[84]

Unique characteristics and features[edit]

The green sea turtles exhibit sex differences by their development and appearance. As adult turtles, males are easily distinguishable from the females by having a longer tail (visibly extending past the shell) and longer claws on the front flippers. The hatching time and sex of the turtles are determined by the incubation temperature of the nest. Hatchings occur more quickly in nests that are warmer than nests that are in cooler conditions. Warm nesting sites above 30 degrees Celsius favor the development of females, whereas nesting sites below 30 degrees Celsius produce males. The position of the egg in the nest also affects sex-determination. Eggs in the center tend to hatch as females due to the warmer conditions within the nest.[32]

Green sea turtles play an essential role in the ecosystem in which they live. In the seagrass beds, the turtles feed on the seagrass by trimming only the top and leaving the roots of the plant. Through their feeding technique, the turtles help to improve the health and growth of the seagrass beds. The healthy seagrass beds that the turtles provide give habitat and feeding grounds for many species of fish and crustaceans. On the nesting beaches, the green sea turtles provide key nutrients for the ecosystem through their hatched egg shells. In their coral reef habitat, the green sea turtles have a symbiotic interaction with reef fish, including the yellow tang. The yellow tang fish swims along with the turtle and feeds on the algae, barnacles, and parasites on its shell and flippers. This species interaction provides food for the yellow tang and provides a necessary cleaning and smoothing of the turtle’s shell. This cleaning helps the turtles swim by reducing the amount of drag and improves their health.[60]

Importance to humans[edit]

Black-and-white photo of several turtles set on their backs

Harvested green turtles on a wharf at Key West, Florida

Historically, the turtles’ skin was tanned and used to make handbags, especially in Hawaii.[22] Ancient Chinese considered the flesh of sea turtles a culinary delicacy, including and especially C. mydas.[85] Particularly for this species, the turtle’s fat, cartilage, and flesh, known as calipee, are sought as ingredients for making turtle soup, a popular 19th-century English and American dish.[86][87][20]

In Java, Indonesia, sea turtle eggs were a popular delicacy. However, the turtle’s flesh is regarded as ḥarām or «unclean» under Islamic law (Islam is Java’s primary religion). In Bali, turtle meat was a prominent feature at ceremonial and religious feasts. Turtles were harvested in the remotest parts of the Indonesian archipelago.[88] Bali has been importing sea turtles since the 1950s, as its own turtle supplies became depleted.[89] The mostly Hindu Balinese do not eat the eggs, but sell them instead to local Muslims.

Commercial farms, such as the Cayman Turtle Farm in the West Indies, once bred them for commercial sale of turtle meat, turtle oil (rendered from the fat), turtle shell, and turtle leather made from the skin. The farm’s initial stock was in large part from «doomed» eggs removed from nests threatened by erosion, flooding, or in chemically hostile soil.[90] The farms held as many as 100,000 turtles at any one time. When the international markets were closed by regulations that did not allow even farm-bred turtle products to be exported internationally, the surviving farm became primarily a tourist attraction, supporting 11,000 turtles.[91] Initially started as Mariculture Ltd., then Cayman Turtle Farm Ltd and subsequently branded Boatswain’s Beach, in 2010 the farm’s brandname was changed to Cayman Turtle Farm: Island Wildlife Encounter.[92]

Sea turtles are integral to the history and culture of the Cayman Islands. When the islands were first discovered by Christopher Columbus in 1503, he named them «Las Tortugas» because of the abundance of sea turtles in the waters around the islands.[93] Many of the earliest visitors came to the Cayman Islands to capture the turtles as a source of fresh meat during long voyages. The green turtle is a national symbol displayed as part of the coat of arms of the Cayman Islands, which also forms part of the national flag of the Cayman Islands. The country’s currency uses a turtle as the watermark in its banknotes.[94] A stylised sea turtle nicknamed «Sir Turtle» is the mascot of the national airline Cayman Airways[95] and is part of the livery of its aircraft.

A ki’i pōhaku (petroglyph) of a green sea turtle (or honu) can be found on the Big Island of Hawaii in the Pu’u Loa lava fields. The green sea turtle has always held a special meaning for Hawaiians and this petroglyph shows its importance; it may date to when the Hawaiian Islands first became populated. The turtle symbolizes a navigator that can find his way home time after time. This symbol mirrors the real life of the green Hawaiian turtle as it will swim hundreds of miles to lay its eggs at its own place of birth. Though there are other myths as well, some Hawaiian legends say the honu were the first to guide the Polynesians to the Hawaiian Islands. Hawaiians revere the turtle and the legend of Kailua, a turtle who could take the form of a girl at will. In human form, she looked after the children playing on Punalu’u Beach.[96]

Conservation[edit]

Photo from front of swimming turtle

In recent decades, sea turtles have moved from unrestricted exploitation to global protection, with individual countries providing additional protection, although serious threats remain unabated.
All populations are considered «threatened».[97][98]

Threats[edit]

Human action presents both intentional and unintentional threats to the species’ survival. Intentional threats include continued hunting, poaching and egg harvesting. More dangerous are unintentional threats, including boat strikes, fishermen’s nets that lack turtle excluder devices, pollution and habitat destruction. Chemical pollution may create tumors;[99] effluent from harbors near nesting sites may create disturbances; and light pollution may disorient hatchlings. With chemical pollution present, there is a development of tar balls that is often eaten by green sea turtles in a confusion of their food. Tar balls cause the green sea turtle to intake toxins that can block their guts, displace the liver and intestines causing swelling of the tissue.[100] Habitat loss usually occurs due to human development of nesting areas. Beach-front construction, land «reclamation» and increased tourism are examples of such development.[6][8] An infectious tumor-causing disease, fibropapillomatosis, is also a problem in some populations. The disease kills a sizeable fraction of those it infects, though some individuals seem to resist the disease.[22][101][102] In addition, at least in the Southwestern Atlantic (Río de la Plata, Uruguay), exotic invasive species such as the rapa whelk Rapana venosa, were reported massively bio-fouling immature green turtles, reducing buoyancy, increasing drag, and causing severe injuries to the carapace.[103] Because of these threats, many populations are in a vulnerable state.

Pacific green turtles’ foraging habitats are poorly understood and mostly unknown.[104] These foraging grounds are most likely along the coast of Baja California, Mexico and southern California,[105] in which these turtles have a high risk of incidental capture by coastal fisheries. The main mortality factor for these turtles is the shrimp trawlers in Mexico, in which many of these turtles go undocumented.[105] The only foraging area that has been identified is the San Diego Bay, but it is heavily polluted with metals and PCBs.[105] These contaminants have a negative effect on the ocean environment, and have been shown to cause lesions and sometimes mortality.[105] Green turtles also are threatened by entanglement and ingestion of plastic.[105] In San Diego Bay, an adult green turtle was found dead with monofilament netting tightly packed in its esophagus.[105] In addition there are indications that global climate change is affecting the ability of green turtle populations in Australia to produce males due to their temperature-dependent sex determination and the rising temperatures in the northern Great Barrier Reef region.[106] Construction of new thermal power stations can raise local water temperature, which is also said to be a threat.[107]

Green sea turtles are the most commonly traded species along Java’s south coast and are sold in the form of whole, stuffed animals or turtle oil, locally known as «minyak bulus».[108]

The geographer James J. Parsons’ book titled The Green Turtle and Man played a special role in the conservation movement to save the species from extinction.[109]

Global initiatives[edit]

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has repeatedly listed green sea turtles in its Red List under differing criteria. In 1982, they officially classified it as an endangered species.[110] The 1986,[111] 1988,[112] 1990,[113] 1994,[114] and the landmark 1996 edition of the IUCN Red List, retained the listing.[115]

In 2001, Nicholas Mrosovsky filed a delisting petition, claiming some green turtle populations were large, stable and in some cases, increasing. At the time, the species was listed under the strict EN A1abd criteria. The IUCN Standards and Petitions Subcommittee ruled that visual counts of nesting females could not be considered «direct observation» and thus downgraded the species’ status to EN A1bd—retaining the turtle’s endangered status.[116]

In 2004, the IUCN reclassified C. mydas as endangered under the EN A2bd criteria, which essentially states the wild populations face a high risk of extinction because of several factors. These factors include a probable population reduction of more than 50% over the past decade as estimated from abundance indices and by projecting exploitation levels.[1]

On 3 May 2007, C. mydas was listed on Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) as a member of the family Cheloniidae.[117] The species was originally listed on Appendix II in 1975. The entire family was moved to Appendix I in 1977, with the exception of the Australian population of C. mydas. In 1981, the Australian population joined the rest. The Appendix I listing prohibits commercial international trade in the species (including parts and derivatives).[118] The Zoological Society of London has listed the reptile as an EDGE species.[119]

The Mediterranean population is listed as critically endangered.[6][20] The eastern Pacific, Hawaiian and Southern California subpopulations are designated threatened. Specific Mexican subpopulations are listed as endangered. The Florida population is listed as endangered. The World Wide Fund for Nature has labeled populations in Pakistan as «rare and declining».[52]

Since 1999, The Florida Aquarium has led extensive sea turtle rehabilitation efforts and visitor and community education & conservation platforms to advance sea turtle protection. Over a 20-year period, the Aquarium received 200 sea turtles, and while not all could be deemed releasable due to the nature of their injuries or illnesses, 180 were successfully released. In 2019, they opened a state-of-the-art Sea Turtle Rehabilitation Center in Apollo Beach, Florida. In the first year, The Florida Aquarium Animal Response Team managed the care of 21 sea turtles, initiated new foraging-readiness testing for release candidates in deep-dive tank, and released 14 animals. In 2020, they also initiated a study to better understand how micro-plastics are impacting the sea turtles in their care. In 2016, Florida enacted extensive protection measures. Florida Statutes (F.A.C. Rule 68E-1) restrict the take, possession, disturbance, mutilation, destruction, selling, transference, molestation, and harassment of marine turtles, nests or eggs. Protection is also afforded to marine turtle habitat. A specific authorization from Commission staff is required to conduct scientific, conservation, or educational activities that directly involve marine turtles in or collected from Florida, their nests, hatchlings or parts thereof, regardless of applicant’s possession of any federal permit.

In the State of Hawaii, specifically on the Island of Hawai’i (Hawaii County), state representative Faye Hanohano, a Native Hawaiian rights activist, pressed for a measure to delist C. mydas from protected status so that Native Hawaiians could legally harvest the turtles and possibly their eggs as well. The bill, HCR14, was largely overlooked by the media since at that point it was only a local issue. While the bill was passed in the United States House of Representatives, the United States Senate’s Committee on Energy and Environment refused to hear it, which meant that the bill did not go on to be heard by the Senate.[120]

Country-specific initiatives[edit]

In addition to management by global entities such as the IUCN and CITES, specific countries around the world have undertaken conservation efforts.

The Indonesian island of Bali has traditional uses that were considered sustainable, but have been questioned considering greater demand from the larger and wealthier human population. The harvest was the most intensive in the world.[88] In 1999, Indonesia restricted turtle trade and consumption because of the decreasing population and threat of a tourist boycott. It rejected a request made by Bali Governor I Made Mangku Pastika in November 2009 to set a quota of 1,000 turtles to be killed in Hindu religious ceremonies. While conservationists respect the need for turtles in rituals, they wanted a smaller quota.[121]

Multiple protected areas of the Philippines have significant green sea turtle nesting and feeding sites. The most notable is Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary, an UNESCO tentative site which encompasses an entire municipality and one of Southeast Asia’s most important green sea turtle nesting sites.[122] Other notable sites include the UNESCO tentative site of El Nido-Taytay Management Resource Protected Area and the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park. The species is protected under Republic Act 9147 or the Wildlife Resources Conservation and Protection Act, while the sites where they live and nest are protected under the National Integrated Protected Areas System Act.[123]

Ecotourism is one initiative in Sabah, Malaysia. The island of Pulau Selingan is home to a turtle hatchery. Staff people place some of the eggs laid each night in a hatchery to protect them from predators. Incubation takes around sixty days. When the eggs hatch, tourists assist in the release of the baby turtles into the sea.[124]

The Hawaiian subpopulation has made a remarkable comeback and is now one focus of ecotourism and has become something of a state mascot. Students of Hawaii Preparatory Academy on the Big Island have tagged thousands of specimens since the early 1990s.[22]

In the United Kingdom the species is protected by a Biodiversity Action Plan, due to excess harvesting and marine pollution.[125] The Pakistani-branch of the World Wide Fund for Nature has been initiating projects for secure turtle hatching since the 1980s. However, the population has continued to decline.[8]

In the Atlantic, conservation initiatives have centered around Caribbean nesting sites. The Tortuguero nesting beaches in Costa Rica have been the subject of egg-collection limits since the 1950s. The Tortuguero National Park was formally established in 1976, in part, to protect that region’s nesting grounds.[34] On Ascension Island, which contains some of the most important nesting beaches, an active conservation program has been implemented.[126] Karumbé has been monitoring foraging and developmental areas of juvenile green turtles in Uruguay since 1999.[127]

Cayman Turtle Farm located in Grand Cayman in the northwest Caribbean Sea is the first farm to have achieved the second generation of green sea turtles bred, laid, hatched, and raised in captivity.[128] Since its beginning in 1968, the farm has released over 31,000 turtles into the wild,[93] and each year more captive-bred turtles are released into the Caribbean Sea from beaches around the island of Grand Cayman.[129] Captive-bred turtles released from the farm as hatchlings or yearlings with «living tags,» have now begun to return to nest on Grand Cayman as adults.[130][131] On February 19, 2012 the farm released the first 2nd-generation captive-bred green sea turtle equipped with a Position Tracking Transponder, or PTT[132] (also known as a satellite tag).[133] In addition, the farm provides turtle meat products to the local population for whom turtle has been part of the traditional cuisine for centuries. In so doing, the farm curtails the incentive to take turtles from the wild,[134] which over the years in addition to the Cayman Turtle Farm’s release of captive-bred turtles has enabled an increase in the number of turtles sighted in the waters around the island of Grand Cayman and nesting on its beaches.[135]

In the Pacific, green sea turtles nest on the motu (islets) in the Funafuti Conservation Area, a marine conservation area covering 33 square kilometers (12.74 square miles) of reef, lagoon and motu on the western side of Funafuti atoll in Tuvalu.[136]

On Raine Island, up to 100,000 nesting females have been observed in a season, with the cay producing 90% of the region’s green turtles. However, the hatching rate declined in the 1990s, and a further decline in the population was threatened by the deaths of thousands of females as they struggled to climb the small sandy cliffs. In addition, as the shape of the island had changed over time, the spread of the beaches outwards had led to greater risk of inundation of the turtle nests. Between 2011 and 2020, a collaborative project by the Queensland Government, BHP (as corporate sponsor), the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Great Barrier Reef Foundation, and Wuthathi and Meriam traditional owners, reshaped the island using heavy machinery in a way that gave the female turtles a smoother passage and reduced the risk of nest inundation. A sophisticated monitoring and research system, using 3D modelling, satellite technology and drones was employed, and monitoring continues.[137]

As of June 2020, a project called «The Turtle Cooling Project» is being undertaken by scientists from the World Wildlife Fund Australia, University of Queensland, Deakin University and the Queensland Government. It is looking at the effect of global warming on northern green turtle breeding, in particular the effect of producing more male turtles owing to the higher temperatures. They are working in the area around Raine Island, Heron Island and Moulter Cay.[138]

Genetics[edit]

The genome of Chelonia mydas was sequenced in 2013 to examine the development and evolution of the turtle body plan.[139]

See also[edit]

  • Sea Turtle Association of Japan, Kuroshima Research Station
  • T.K. Bellis The «Turtle King».

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Seminoff, J.A.; et al. (Southwest Fisheries Science Center, U.S.) (2004). «Chelonia mydas«. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004: e.T4615A11037468. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T4615A11037468.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ «Appendices | CITES». cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ a b Fritz, Uwe; Peter Havaš (2007). «Checklist of Chelonians of the World» (PDF). Vertebrate Zoology. 57 (2): 165–167. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 1, 2011. Retrieved May 29, 2012.
  4. ^ Swash, A. & Still, R. (2005). Birds, Mammals, and Reptiles of the Galápagos Islands. Second Edition. Hampshire, UK:WildGuides Ltd. p.116.
  5. ^ a b «Chelonia mydas«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h «Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas)». National Geographic – Animals. National Geographic Society. December 29, 2005. Archived from the original on 2007-02-05. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  7. ^ a b c Ferri, Vincenzo (2002). Turtles & Tortoises. Buffalo, New York: Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1-55209-631-4.
  8. ^ a b c d e «Green Sea Turtle – Chelonia mydas japonica«. Turtles of Pakistan. Wildlife of Pakistan. 2003. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  9. ^ «Green sea turtle».
  10. ^ Aplin, K.P.; Smith, L.A. (2001). «Checklist of the frogs and reptiles of Westem Australia» (PDF). Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement. 6 (3): 51–74. doi:10.18195/issn.0313-122x.63.2001.051-074. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  11. ^ Bowen, Brian W.; Nelson, William S.; Avise, John C. (June 15, 1993). «A Molecular Phylogeny for Marine Turtles: Trait Mapping, Rate Assessment, and Conservation Relevance». Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 90 (12): 5574–5577. Bibcode:1993PNAS…90.5574B. doi:10.1073/pnas.90.12.5574. PMC 46763. PMID 8516304.
  12. ^ «Testudo mydas«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  13. ^ Chelonia agassizi is a commonly cited misspelling of this taxon.
  14. ^ «Chelonia agassizi«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  15. ^ Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. (Chelonia mydas agasizii, p. 2).
  16. ^ «Chelonia agassizii«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  17. ^ a b c d Karl, Stephen H.; Brian W. Bowen (1999). «Evolutionary Significant Units versus Geopolitical Taxonomy: Molecular Systematics of an Endangered Sea Turtle (genus Chelonia)». Conservation Biology. 13 (5): 990–999. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.97352.x. S2CID 85192260.
  18. ^ «Chelonia mydas agassizi«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  19. ^ «Chelonia mydas mydas«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  20. ^ a b c «green turtle». Marine Turtles. Marine Conservation Society. 2007. Archived from the original on August 22, 2007. Retrieved August 30, 2007.
  21. ^ Mary Kawena Pukui and Samuel Hoyt Elbert (2003). «lookup of honu«. in Hawaiian Dictionary. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii Press.
  22. ^ a b c d e Glick, Daniel (September 2005). «Back from the Brink». Smithsonian Magazine: 54–55. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  23. ^ Balazs, G.H.; Southwest Fisheries Center (U.S.) (1980). Synopsis of Biological Data on the Green Turtle in the Hawaiian Islands. NOAA-TM-NMFS-SWFC. Vol. 7. Honolulu, Hawaii: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service.
  24. ^ a b c d e f «Green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas)». North Florida Field Office. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. December 29, 2005. Archived from the original on June 29, 2017. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  25. ^ Kindersley, Dorling (2005). Animal. New York City: DK Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7894-7764-4.
  26. ^ «SEA TURTLES — Physical Characteristics». Archived from the original on 2013-07-28. Retrieved 2012-04-03.
  27. ^ «Species Fact Sheet: Green Sea Turtle». Caribbean Conservation Corporation & Sea Turtle Survival League. Caribbean Conservation Corporation. December 29, 2005. Archived from the original on February 24, 2007. Retrieved February 22, 2007.
  28. ^ «National Geographic». Green Sea Turtle. 11 April 2010.
  29. ^ a b «Green Sea Turtle». MarineBio.org. May 21, 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2007.
  30. ^ Boulenger, G. A. (1890). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Reptilia and Batrachia. London: Taylor & Francis. pp. 541. ISBN 978-0-548-96848-2.
  31. ^ Bowen, B.W., Meylan, A.B.; Ross, J.P.; Limpus, C.J.; Balazs, G.H.; Avise, J.C.. (1992) Global population structure and natural history of the green turtle (Chelonia mydas) in terms of matriarchal phylogeny. Evolution. International Journal of Organic Evolution. Vol. 46, No 4, pp. 865–881
  32. ^ a b c d e f Spotila, J. (2004). Sea Turtles: A Complete Guide to their Biology, Behavior, and Conservation. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  33. ^ Connolly, Norma (June 2, 2011). «More turtles nesting in Cayman». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. (Quoted Ebanks-Petrie, Gina and Blumenthal, Janice of the Department of the Environment, Cayman Islands)
  34. ^ a b Bjorndal, Karen A.; Jerry A. Wetherall; Alan B. Bolten; Jeanne A. Mortimer (February 1999). «Twenty-Six Years of Green Turtle Nesting at Tortuguero, Costa Rica: An Encouraging Trend». Conservation Biology. 13 (1): 126–134. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.97329.x. S2CID 86436582.
  35. ^ Lahanas, P. N.; K. A. Bjorndal; A. B. Bolten; S. E. Encalada; M. M. Miyamoto; R. A. Valverde; B. W. Bowen (1998). «Genetic composition of a green turtle (Chelonia mydas) feeding ground population: evidence for multiple origins» (PDF). Marine Biology. 130 (3): 345–352. doi:10.1007/s002270050254. S2CID 30428806. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2007. Retrieved September 1, 2007.
  36. ^ Audubon, Maria R. (1986). Audubon and His Journals: Dover Publications Reprint. New York: Scribner’s Sons. pp. 373–375. ISBN 978-0-486-25144-8.
  37. ^ a b Girondot, Marc; Jacques Fretey (1996). «Leatherback Turtles, Dermochelys coriacea, Nesting in French Guiana, 1978–1995″. Chelonian Conservation and Biology. 2: 204–208. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2007.
  38. ^ Seminoff, Jeffrey A. (2002). IUCN 2002 Red List Global Status Assessment: Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) (PDF). of the World Conservation Union (IUCN). p. 93. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-12-17.
  39. ^ Godley, Brendan J.; Annette C. Broderick; Graeme C. Hays (February 2001). «Nesting of green turtles (Chelonia mydas) at Ascension Island, South Atlantic». Biological Conservation. 97 (2): 151–158. doi:10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00107-5.
  40. ^ Broderick, Annette C.; Brendan J. Godley; Graeme C. Hays (2001). «Monitoring and conservation of marine turtles of Ascension Island: a sustainable resource». Interim Report to Foreign and Commonwealth Office Environment Fund for the Overseas Territories. p. 13.
  41. ^ a b Green turtle nesting sites (Map). Cartography by Center for Marine Conservation. Caribbean Conservation Corporation. 1961. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  42. ^ Seminoff, Jeffrey A.; Javier Alvarado; Carlos Delgado; Jose Luis Lopez; Gabriel Hoeffer (June 2002). «First Direct Evidence of Migration by an East Pacific Green Seaturtle from Michoacan, Mexico to a Feeding Ground on the Sonoran Coast of the Gulf of California». The Southwestern Naturalist. 47 (2): 314–316. doi:10.2307/3672922. JSTOR 3672922.
  43. ^ «Ocean Ambassadors – Philippine Turtle Islands». Coastal Resource & Fisheries Management of the Philippines. OneOcean.org. Retrieved February 6, 2007.
  44. ^
    Abs-Cbn Interactive, Green sea turtle caught in Zamboanga.
  45. ^ Indonesian Sea Turtle Conservation (PDF). Yayasan, Indonesia: World Wide Fund for Nature, Indonesia. p. 4. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  46. ^ Dobbs, Kirstin (2007). Marine turtle and dugong habitats in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park used to implement biophysical operational principles for the Representative Areas Program (PDF). Great Barrier Marine Park Authority. ISBN 978-1-876945-58-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-18.
  47. ^ Tucker, Anton D.; Mark A. Read (September 2001). «Frequency of Foraging by Gravid Green Turtles (Chelonia mydas) at Raine Island, Great Barrier Reef». Journal of Herpetology. 35 (3): 500–503. doi:10.2307/1565970. JSTOR 1565970.
  48. ^ «Melomys rubicola — Bramble Cay Melomys». Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment, Australian Government. 22 August 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  49. ^ Ellison, Joanna (1998). «Natural History of Bramble Cay, Torres Strait» (PDF). Atoll Research Bulletin. 455: 1–31. doi:10.5479/si.00775630.455.1. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  50. ^ C.Michael Hogan. 2011. Coral Sea. Encyclopedia of Earth. Eds. P.Saundry & C.J.Cleveland. National Council for Science and the Environment. Washington DC
  51. ^ a b Butler, E.; A. Astola (1877). «A summer cruise in the Gulf of Oman». Stray Feathers. 5: 283–304.
  52. ^ a b Groombridge, Brian; Aban Marker Kabraji; Abdul Latif Rao (1988). «Marine Turtles in Baluchistan (Pakistan)». Marine Turtle Newsletter. 42: 1–3. Retrieved August 30, 2007.
  53. ^ Green, Derek (1993). «Growth Rates of Wild Immature Green Turtles in the Galápagos Islands, Ecuador». Journal of Herpetology. 27 (3): 338–341. doi:10.2307/1565159. JSTOR 1565159.
  54. ^ Pritchard, Peter C (1971). «Galápagos Sea Turtles – Preliminary Findings». Journal of Herpetology. 5 (1/2): 1–9. doi:10.2307/1562836. JSTOR 1562836.
  55. ^ a b c d e Parham, J. F.; Zug, G. R. (1996). «Chelonia agassizii – Valid Or Not?». Marine Turtle Newsletter. 72: 2–5.
  56. ^ a b Pritchard, Peter C. H. (1999). «Status of the black sea turtle». Conservation Biology. 13 (5): 1000–1003. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.98432.x. S2CID 84867842.
  57. ^ Bowen, B. W.; Karl, S. A. «Status of the East Pacific Green Turtle (Chelonia agassizii)». Marine Turtle Newsletter. 89: 20–22.
  58. ^ Uetz, P.; Freed, P.; Hošek, J. (eds.). «Chelonia mydas«. The Reptile Database. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  59. ^ Rhodin, A.G.J.; Iverson, J.B.; Bour, R. Fritz; Georges, U.; Shaffer, H.B. & van Dijk, P.P. (2017). Rhodin, A.G.J.; Iverson, J.B.; van Dijk, P.P.; Saumure, R.A.; Buhlmann, K.A.; Pritchard, P.C.H. & Mittermeier, R.A. (eds.). Turtles of the World: Annotated Checklist and Atlas of Taxonomy, Synonymy, Distribution, and Conservation Status. Chelonian Research Monographs. Conservation Biology of Freshwater Turtles and Tortoises: A Compilation Project of the IUCN/SSC Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group. Vol. 7 (8th ed.). pp. 1–292. doi:10.3854/crm.7.checklist.atlas.v8.2017. ISBN 9781532350269.
  60. ^ a b c d e Ruckdeschel, C. and Shoop, C. R. 2006. Sea Turtles of the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of the United States. A Wormsloe Foundation nature book; Wormsloe Foundation nature book. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
  61. ^ «Green Turtle, Chelonia mydas«. Fisheries: Office of Protected Resources. U. S. National Oceanographic Atmospheric Administration. 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2007.
  62. ^ a b Reich, Kimberly J.; Karen A. Bjorndal; Alan B. Bolten (September 18, 2007). «The ‘lost years’ of green turtles: using stable isotopes to study cryptic lifestages». Biology Letters. 3 (6): 712–4. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0394. PMC 2391226. PMID 17878144.
  63. ^ a b Brynner, Jeanna (September 19, 2007). «Sea Turtles’ Mystery Hideout Revealed». LiveScience. Imaginova Corp. Retrieved September 20, 2007.
  64. ^ P. Luschi, G. C. Hays, C. Del Seppia, R. Marsh, and F. Papi. (1998) The navigational feats of green sea turtles
    migrating from Ascension Island investigated by satellite telemetry. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B.
  65. ^ Arthur, Karen; Boyle, Michelle; Limpus, Colin (June 30, 2008). «Ontogenetic Changes in Diet and Habitat Use in Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas) Life History» (PDF). Mar Ecol Prog Ser. 362: 303–311. Bibcode:2008MEPS..362..303A. doi:10.3354/meps07440. Retrieved Dec 20, 2015.
  66. ^ a b c Devaux, Bernard (2000). On the Trail of Sea Turtles. Paris, France: Barron’s Nature Travel Guides. ISBN 978-0-7641-1162-4.
  67. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  68. ^ Devaux, Bernard (2000). On the Trail of Sea Turtles. Barron’s Nature Travel Guides. ISBN 978-0-7641-1162-4.
  69. ^ http://www.nwf.org/wildlife/wildlife-library/amphibians-reptiles-and-fish/sea-turtles/green-sea-turtle.aspxNishizawa, H., M. Asahara, N. Kamezaki, and N. Arai. 2010. Differences in the skull morphology between juvenile and adult green turtles: implications for the ontogenetic diet shift. Current Herpetology 29(2): 97–101. [1]
  70. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  71. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  72. ^ «Green Sea Turtle». National Wildlife Federation.
  73. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  74. ^ «Hawaiian Green Sea Turtle». Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. September 5, 2002. Archived from the original on August 16, 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2007.
  75. ^ Predation on green turtle Chelonia mydas nests by wild canids at Akyatan beach, Turkey by L. Brown and D. W. Macdonald, Biological Conservation, Volume 71, Issue 1, 1995, pp. 55–60.
  76. ^ McGowin, A.E.; Truong, T.M.; Corbett, A.M.; Clark, Dave (2011). «Genetic barcoding of marine leeches (Ozobranchus spp.) from Florida sea turtles and their divergence in host specificity». Molecular Ecology Resources. 11 (2): 271–278. doi:10.1111/j.1755-0998.2010.02946.x. PMID 21429133. S2CID 34067696.
  77. ^ «Australian Threatened Species: Green turtle (Chelonia mydas(PDF) (Press release). Government of Australia. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 11, 2007. Retrieved August 15, 2007.
  78. ^ a b Wynekey, J.; Lohmann, J.K.; Musick, J.A. 2013. The biology of sea turtles. CRC Press. Vol 3. Pp 59–70
  79. ^ Lee, Patricia L. M.; Graeme C. Hays (April 27, 2004). «Polyandry in a marine turtle: Females make the best of a bad job». Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 101 (17): 6530–6535. Bibcode:2004PNAS..101.6530L. doi:10.1073/pnas.0307982101. PMC 404079. PMID 15096623.
  80. ^ a b Bonin, Franck (2006). Turtles of the World. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore. ISBN 978-0-8018-8496-2.
  81. ^ Spotila, J. R. (2004). Sea turtles: a complete guide to their biology, behavior, and conservation. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  82. ^ «Green turtle». wwf.panda.org. Retrieved 2015-10-19.
  83. ^ Fowler, Stephen (April 21, 2002). «About The Green Turtle on Ascension». Turtles. Ascension Island Heritage Society. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  84. ^ Lutz, P. L., Musick, J. A., and Wyneken, J. 1997. The Biology of Sea Turtles. Marine Science series; Marine science series; CRC marine biology series. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
  85. ^ Schafer, Edward H. (1962). «Eating Turtles in Ancient China». Journal of the American Oriental Society. 82 (1): 73–74. doi:10.2307/595986. JSTOR 595986.
  86. ^ Clarkson, Janet (2010). Soup: a global history. London: Reaktion. pp. 115–118. ISBN 978-1-86189-774-9. OCLC 642290114.
  87. ^ The Country Housewife and Lady’s Director, by Prof. R. Bradley, 1728
  88. ^ a b Whitten, T; Soeriaatmadja, R. E.; Suraya A. A. (1996). The Ecology of Java and Bali. Hong Kong: Periplus Editions Ltd. pp. 756–760. ISBN 978-962-593-072-5.
  89. ^
    Sumertha, I.N. 1974. Perikanan penyu dan cara pengelolaan di Indonesia. Dokumen. Kom. IPB 8: 1–18. Cited in Whitten, T; Soeriaatmadja, R. E.; Suraya A. A. (1996). The Ecology of Java and Bali. Hong Kong: Periplus Editions Ltd. p. 757. ISBN 978-962-593-072-5.
  90. ^ Fosdick, Peggy & Sam (1994). Last chance lost?: can and should farming save the green sea turtle?. York, PA, USA: Irvin S. Naylor. pp. 73, 90.
  91. ^ Morriss, Andrew. «Survival of the Sea Turtle: Cayman Turtle Farm Starts Over». PERC Reports. Property and Environment Research Center. Archived from the original on 2012-07-23. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  92. ^ «About Us: 2010». Cayman Turtle Farm. Archived from the original on May 7, 2012. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  93. ^ a b «Turtle release set». Caymanian Compass. October 23, 2007. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  94. ^ «Fresh, new banknotes ready». Caymanian Compass. April 6, 2011. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  95. ^ McGowan, Cliodhna (May 13, 2007). «Sir Turtle to keep flying». Caymanian Compass.
  96. ^ www.HawaiianLife.com
  97. ^ Fisheries, NOAA. «Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) :: NOAA Fisheries». www.nmfs.noaa.gov. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  98. ^ «Green Sea Turtles of Florida, Mexico No Longer Endangered». U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Discovery News. 2016. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
  99. ^ Kessler, Rebecca (November 9, 2010). «Sea Turtle Herpes Tumors Linked to Sewage?». National Geographic News. Retrieved November 9, 2010.
  100. ^ Shigenaka, Gary; Milton, Sarah; Lutz, Peter; Shigenaka, Gary; Hoff, Rebecca Z.; Yender, Ruth A.; Mearns, Alan J. (1 August 2003). Oil and Sea Turtles: Biology, Planning, and Response (PDF) (1 ed.). Florida: U.S. Department Of Commerce: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. pp. 35–46. doi:10.13140/2.1.1774.0486. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  101. ^ Herbst, Lawrence H. (September 2000). «Marine Turtle Fibropapillomatosis: Hope Floats in a Sea of Ignorance». Proceedings of the 19th Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Conservation and Biology. 19: 39–40. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-443.
  102. ^ Moncada, Felix; Adela Prieto (September 2000). «Incidence of Fibropapillomas in the Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) in Cuban Waters». Proceedings of the 19th Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Conservation and Biology. 19: 40–41. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-443.
  103. ^ Lezama, C., Carranza, A., Fallabrino, A., Estrades, A., Scarabino, F., & López-Mendilaharsu, M. (2013). Unintended backpackers: bio-fouling of the invasive gastropod Rapana venosa on the green turtle Chelonia mydas in the Río de la Plata Estuary, Uruguay. Biological invasions, 15(3), 483–487
  104. ^ Seminoff (2002). «Home range of green turtles Chelonia mydas at a coastal foraging area in the Gulf of California, Mexico». Mar Ecol Prog Ser. 242: 253–265. Bibcode:2002MEPS..242..253S. doi:10.3354/meps242253.
  105. ^ a b c d e f National Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1998. Recovery Plan for U.S. Pacific Populations of the East Pacific Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas). National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD.
  106. ^ «Some Great Barrier Reef turtle populations produce nothing but females». 2018.
  107. ^ «Coal-fired plant project threatens endangered sea turtles on Turkey’s Mediterranean shores». bianet. 15 June 2020.
  108. ^ Nijman, Vincent (2015). «Decades long open trade in protected marine turtles along java’s south coast». Marine Turtle Newsletter – via ResearchGate.
  109. ^ William M. Denevan. «James J. Parsons, 1915-1997». in Patrick H. Artmstrong and Geoffrey J. Martin. editors on behalf of the Commission on the History of Geographical Thought of the International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science. (2000). Geographers : biobibliographical studies, v. 19. Strand, London ; New York, NY : Mansell Publishing Limited. p. 90. ISBN 0720123771.
  110. ^ Groombridge, B. (1982). The IUCN Amphibia-Reptilia Red Data Book, Part 1: Testudines, Crocodylia, Rhynocehapalia. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
  111. ^ IUCN Conservation Monitoring Centre (1986). 1986 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK: IUCN. ISBN 978-2-88032-605-0.
  112. ^ IUCN Conservation Monitoring Centre (1988). 1988 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK: IUCN. ISBN 9782880329358.
  113. ^ IUCN (1990). 1990 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK.: IUCN.
  114. ^ Groombridge, B. (1994). 1994 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN. ISBN 978-2-8317-0194-3.
  115. ^ Groombridge, B.; Baillie (1996). 1996 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
  116. ^ Red List Standards; Petitions Subcommittee (October 18, 2001). «Ruling of the IUCN Red List Standards and Petitions Subcommittee on Petitions against the 1996 Listings of Four Marine Turtle Species, 18 October 2001» (PDF). International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 December 2006. Retrieved February 5, 2007.
  117. ^ CITES (May 3, 2007). «Appendices». Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna. Archived from the original (SHTML) on December 29, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  118. ^ UNEP-WCMC. «Chelonia mydas A-301.003.002.002″. UNEP-WCMC Species Database: CITES-Listed Species. United Nations Environment Programme – World Conservation Monitoring Centre. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  119. ^ «Green Turtle». EDGE of Existence. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  120. ^ Callis, Tom (4 April 2013). «Turtle report months away». Hawaii Tribune Herald. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  121. ^ Karmini, Niniek (November 27, 2009). «Indonesia rejects Bali plan for turtle sacrifices». Associated Press. Archived from the original on November 27, 2009. Retrieved November 27, 2009.
  122. ^ «Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary».
  123. ^ «Protecting the endangered ‘pawikan’ | Jonathan L. Mayuga». BusinessMirror. 15 October 2017.
  124. ^ «Selingan Turtle Island». Borneo: Journey Malaysia. Dolphin Diaries Travel Sdn Bhd. 2007. Archived from the original on July 22, 2015. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  125. ^ «Grouped Species Action Plan: Grouped plan for marine turtles». UK Biodiversity Action Plan. UK Joint Nature Conservation Committee. 2006. Archived from the original on August 5, 2007. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  126. ^ «Ascension Conservation». Ascension Conservation, Wildlife. Ascension Conservation. 2007. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  127. ^ Karumbé
  128. ^ «History: 1989». Cayman Turtle Farm. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  129. ^ Fuller, Brent (November 18, 2011). «Little turtles swimming for it». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  130. ^ Bell, Catherine; Parsons J; Austin TJ; Broderick AC; Ebanks-Petrie G; Godley GJ (25 April 2005). «Some of them came home: the Cayman Turtle Farm headstarting project for the green turtle Chelonia mydas«. Oryx. 39 (2): 137–148. doi:10.1017/S0030605305000372.
  131. ^ Connolly, Norma (June 2, 2011). «More turtles nesting in Cayman». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. five turtles with tags from the Cayman Turtle Farm were observed nesting on Seven Mile Beach
  132. ^ Position Tracking
  133. ^ Cayman Turtle Farm. «Cayman Turtle Farm Green Sea Turtle Releases». SeaTurtle.org. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  134. ^ Brammer, Jeff (October 16, 2011). «What if the turtle farm went belly up?». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. presenting disincentives to poachers due to the commercial availability of turtle meat
  135. ^ Connolly, Norma (June 2, 2011). «More turtles nesting in Cayman». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. (Quoted Ebanks-Petrie, Gina and Blumenthal, Janice of Department of the Environment, Cayman Islands)
  136. ^ «Tuvalu Funafuti Conservation Area». Ministry of Communication, Transport and Tourism – Government of Tuvalu. Archived from the original on 2011-11-02. Retrieved 28 Oct 2011.
  137. ^ Kim, Sharnie; Rigby, Mark (12 June 2020). «Green turtle rookery on Raine Island brought back from brink, but scientists’ fight not over yet». ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  138. ^ Kilvert, Nick (12 June 2020). «Turning female: The race to save the northern green turtle». ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  139. ^ Wang Z.; Pascual-Anaya, J.; Zadissa A. (2013). «The draft genomes of the soft-shell turtle and green sea turtle yield insights into the development and evolution of the turtle-specific body plan». Nature Genetics. 45 (6): 701–706. doi:10.1038/ng.2615. PMC 4000948. PMID 23624526.

External links[edit]

  • «Chelonia mydas «. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  • Seminoff (2004). «Chelonia mydas«. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004. Retrieved 9 May 2006.

  • Images and movies (Chelonia mydas) — ARKive (archived 20 March 2006)
  • US National Marine Fisheries Service green sea turtle page
  • Floridian and Mexican populations—US Fish and Wildlife Service
  • Desktop wallpaper & fun green turtle facts
  • Green turtle video – Macaulay Library
  • Baby green sea turtles – Open Water 859 (video on YouTube)
  • Photos of Green sea turtle on Sealife Collection

«Green turtle» redirects here. For the comic book character, see Green Turtle (comics).

«Chelonia» redirects here. For the synonym of the order Testudines, see Turtle.

Green sea turtle
Green turtle swimming over coral reefs in Kona.jpg
A green sea turtle swimming above a Hawaiian coral reef

Conservation status


Endangered (IUCN 3.1)[1]

CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]

Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Chelonioidea
Family: Cheloniidae
Subfamily: Cheloniinae
Genus: Chelonia
Brongniart, 1800
Species:

C. mydas

Binomial name
Chelonia mydas

(Linnaeus, 1758)

Synonyms[3]

Species synonymy

  • Testudo mydas
    Linnaeus, 1758
  • Testudo macropus
    Walbaum, 1782
    (nomen illegitimum)
  • Testudo viridis
    Schneider, 1783
  • Testudo japonica
    Thunberg, 1787
  • Testudo marina vulgaris
    Lacépède, 1788
  • Testudo viridisquamosa
    Lacépède, 1788
  • Testudo mydas macropus
    Suckow, 1798
  • Chelonia mydas
    — Brongniart, 1800
  • Testudo chloronotos
    Bechstein, 1800
  • Testudo cepediana
    Daudin, 1801
  • Testudo rugosa
    Daudin, 1801
  • Chelone mydas
    — Brongniart, 1805
  • Chelonia japonica
    — Schweigger, 1812
  • Chelonia virgata
    Schweigger, 1812
  • Caretta cepedii
    Merrem, 1820
  • Caretta esculenta
    Merrem, 1820
  • Caretta thunbergii
    Merrem, 1820
  • Caretta mydas
    — Fitzinger, 1826
  • Caretta virgata
    — Fitzinger, 1826
  • Chelonia lachrymata
    Cuvier, 1829
  • Chelonia maculosa
    Cuvier, 1829
  • Chelonia midas [sic]
    Wagler, 1830
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas var. japonica
    — Gray, 1831
  • Chelonia esculenta
    — Wiegmann & Ruthe, 1832
  • Chelonia bicarinata
    Lesson, 1834
  • Chelonia marmorata
    A.M.C. Duméril & Bibron, 1835
  • Chelonia (Chelonia)
    cepedeana [sic]
    Fitzinger, 1835
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia viridis
    — Temminck & Schlegel, 1835
  • Mydas mydas
    — Cocteau, 1838
  • Mydasea mydas
    — Gervais, 1843
  • Euchelonia mydas
    — Tschudi, 1846
  • Megemys mydas
    — Gistel, 1848
  • Chelonia lacrymata [sic]
    Agassiz, 1857
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia formosa
    Girard, 1858
  • Chelonia tenuis
    Girard, 1858
  • Euchelys macropus
    — Girard, 1858
  • Chelone macropus
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone maculosa
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone marmorata
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone virgata
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelone viridis
    — Strauch, 1862
  • Chelonia albiventer
    Nardo, 1864
  • Thalassiochelys albiventer
    — Günther, 1865
  • Chelonia agassizii
    Bocourt, 1868
  • Mydas viridis
    — Gray, 1870
  • Chelone midas
    — Cope, 1871
  • Chelonia lata
    Philippi, 1887
  • Chelone mydas
    — Boulenger, 1889
  • Chelonia mydas mydas
    — Mertens & L. Müller, 1928
  • Caretta thunbergi [sic]
    H.M. Smith, 1931
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas agassizii
    — Carr, 1952
  • Chelonia mydas agassizi [sic]
    Schmidt, 1953
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas carrinegra
    Caldwell, 1962
  • Chelonia agazisii [sic]
    Tamayo, 1962
    (ex errore)
  • Testudo nigrita
    Tamayo, 1962
  • Chelonia agassizi
    — Carr, 1967
  • Chelonia mydus [sic]
    Nutaphand, 1979
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas carinegra [sic]
    Nutaphand, 1979
    (ex errore)
  • Testudo chloronotus [sic]
    H.M. Smith & R.B. Smith, 1980
    (ex errore)
  • Chelone albiventer
    — Márquez, 1990
  • Caretta thumbergii [sic]
    Sharma, 1998
    (ex errore)
  • Chelonia mydas viridis
    — Karl & Bowen, 1999

The green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas), also known as the green turtle, black (sea) turtle or Pacific green turtle,[4] is a species of large sea turtle of the family Cheloniidae. It is the only species in the genus Chelonia.[5] Its range extends throughout tropical and subtropical seas around the world, with two distinct populations in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, but it is also found in the Indian Ocean.[6][7] The common name refers to the usually green fat found beneath its carapace, not to the color of its carapace, which is olive to black.

The dorsoventrally flattened body of C. mydas is covered by a large, teardrop-shaped carapace; it has a pair of large, paddle-like flippers. It is usually lightly colored, although in the eastern Pacific populations, parts of the carapace can be almost black. Unlike other members of its family, such as the hawksbill sea turtle, C. mydas is mostly herbivorous. The adults usually inhabit shallow lagoons, feeding mostly on various species of seagrasses.[8] The turtles bite off the tips of the blades of seagrass, which keeps the grass healthy.

Like other sea turtles, green sea turtles migrate long distances between feeding grounds and hatching beaches. Many islands worldwide are known as Turtle Island due to green sea turtles nesting on their beaches. Females crawl out on beaches, dig nests, and lay eggs during the night. Later, hatchlings emerge, and scramble into the water. Those that reach maturity may live to 90 years in the wild.[6]

C. mydas is listed as endangered by the IUCN and CITES and is protected from exploitation in most countries.[9] It is illegal to collect, harm, or kill them. In addition, many countries have laws and ordinances to protect nesting areas. However, turtles are still in danger due to human activity. In some countries, turtles and their eggs are still hunted for food. Pollution indirectly harms turtles at both population and individual scales. Many turtles die after being caught in fishing nets. In addition, real estate development often causes habitat loss by eliminating nesting beaches.

Taxonomy[edit]

The green sea turtle is a member of the tribe Cheloniini.[10] A 1993 study clarified the status of genus Chelonia with respect to the other marine turtles. The carnivorous Eretmochelys (hawksbill), Caretta (loggerhead) and Lepidochelys (ridley) were assigned to the tribe Carettini. Herbivorous Chelonia warranted their status as a genus, while Natator (flatback) was further removed from the other genera than previously believed.[11]

The species was originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae as Testudo mydas.[12] In 1868, Marie Firmin Bocourt named a particular species of sea turtle Chelonia agassizii,[13][14] in honor of Swiss-American zoologist Louis Agassiz.[15] This «species» was referred to as the «black sea turtle».[16] Later research determined Bocourt’s «black sea turtle» was not genetically distinct from C. mydas, and thus taxonomically not a separate species.[17] These two «species» were then united as Chelonia mydas and populations were given subspecies status: C. mydas mydas referred to the originally described population, while C. mydas agassizi referred only to the Pacific population known as the Galápagos green turtle.[18][19] This subdivision was later determined to be invalid and all species members were then designated Chelonia mydas.[5] The oft-mentioned name C. agassizi remains an invalid junior synonym of C. mydas.

The species’ common name does not derive from any particular green external coloration of the turtle. Its name comes from the greenish color of the turtles’ fat, which is only found in a layer between their inner organs and their shell.[20] As a species found worldwide, the green turtle has many local names. In the Hawaiian language it is called honu,[21][22] and it is locally known as a symbol of good luck and longevity.[23]

  • Green sea turtle swimming over the sand plateau at playa Grandi, Curaçao

    Green sea turtle swimming over the sand plateau at playa Grandi, Curaçao

  • Photo of turtle walking on beach

  • Green sea turtle

    Green sea turtle

  • Coming up for a breath

    Coming up for a breath

Description[edit]

Drawing of turtle carapace and plastron showing respectively, vertebral, costal, marginal, and supracaudal and intergular, gular, pectoral, abdominal, humeral, femoral, anal, axillary (anterior inframarginal), and inguinal (posterior inframarginal) shields

Taxidermied shell of Chelonia mydas

Its appearance is that of a typical sea turtle. C. mydas has a dorsoventrally flattened body, a beaked head at the end of a short neck, and paddle-like arms well-adapted for swimming.[24] Adult green turtles grow to 1.5 metres (5 ft) long.[25] The average weight of mature individuals is 68–190 kg (150–419 lb) and the average carapace length is 78–112 cm (31–44 in).[26] Exceptional specimens can weigh 315 kg (694 lb) or even more, with the largest known C. mydas having weighed 395 kg (871 lb) and measured 153 cm (60 in) in carapace length.[27]

Anatomically, a few characteristics distinguish the green turtle from the other members of its family. Unlike its close relative the hawksbill turtle, the green turtle’s snout is very short and its beak is unhooked. The neck cannot be pulled into the shell.[28] The sheath of the turtle’s upper jaw possesses a denticulated edge, while its lower jaw has stronger, serrated, more defined denticulation. The dorsal surface of the turtle’s head has a single pair of prefrontal scales. Its carapace is composed of five central scutes flanked by four pairs of lateral scutes. Underneath, the green turtle has four pairs of inframarginal scutes covering the area between the turtle’s plastron and its shell. Mature C. mydas front appendages have only a single claw (as opposed to the hawksbill two), although a second claw is sometimes prominent in young specimens.[29]

The carapace of the turtle has various color patterns that change over time. Hatchlings of Chelonia mydas, like those of other marine turtles, have mostly black carapaces and light-colored plastrons. Carapaces of juveniles turn dark brown to olive, while those of mature adults are either entirely brown, spotted or marbled with variegated rays. Underneath, the turtle’s plastron is hued yellow. C. mydas limbs are dark-colored and lined with yellow, and are usually marked with a large dark brown spot in the center of each appendage.[6][30]

Distribution[edit]

Green sea turtle nesting populations

The range of the green sea turtle extends throughout tropical and subtropical oceans worldwide. The two major subpopulations are the Atlantic and the eastern Pacific subpopulations. Each population is genetically distinct, with its own set of nesting and feeding grounds within the population’s known range.[6] One of the genetic differences between the two subpopulations is the type of mitochondrial DNA found in individual’s cells. Individuals from rookeries in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea have a similar type of mitochondrial DNA, and individuals from the Pacific and Indian Oceans have another type of mitochondrial DNA.[31] Their native range includes tropical to subtropical waters along continental coasts and islands between 30°N and 30°S. Since green sea turtles are a migrating species, their global distribution spans into the open ocean. The differences in mitochondrial DNA more than likely stems from the populations being isolated from each other by the southern tips of both South America and Africa with no warm waters for the green sea turtles to migrate through. The green sea turtle is estimated to inhabit coastal areas of more than 140 countries, with nesting sites in over 80 countries worldwide throughout the year. In the United States Atlantic coast, green sea turtles can be found from Texas and north to Massachusetts. In the United States Pacific coast, they have been found from southern California north to the southernmost tip of Alaska. The largest populations of green sea turtles within the United States coastline are in the Hawaiian Islands and Florida. Globally, the largest populations of sea turtles are in the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, and the Caribbean Sea.[32]

Atlantic subpopulation[edit]

The green sea turtle can generally be found throughout the Atlantic Ocean. Although the species is most abundant in tropical climates, green sea turtles can also be found in temperate climates, and individuals have been spotted as far north as Canada in the western Atlantic, and the British Isles in the east. The subpopulation’s southern range is known until past the southern tip of Africa in the east and Argentina in the western Atlantic. The major nesting sites can be found on various islands in the Caribbean, along the Atlantic coast of Florida in the United States, the eastern coast of the South American continent and most notably, on isolated North Atlantic islands.

In the Caribbean, major nesting sites have been identified on Aves Island, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, and Costa Rica. In recent years, there are signs of increased nesting in the Cayman Islands.[33] One of the region’s most important nesting grounds is in Tortuguero in Costa Rica.[34] In fact, the majority of the Caribbean region’s C. mydas population hails from a few beaches in Tortuguero.[35] Within United States waters, minor nesting sites have been noted in the states of Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Florida’s east coast is the largest nesting site in the United States. Hutchinson Island in particular is a major nesting area in Florida waters. Florida has several annual nesting periods when local beaches are closed or cordoned off to protect nesting sites. According to Green Sea Turtle Watch, in 2015 more than 37,000 green sea turtle nests were documented in Florida, a record number. In addition to sporadic distribution of nesting sites, feeding grounds are much more widely distributed throughout Florida. Important feeding grounds in Florida include Indian River Lagoon, the Florida Keys, Florida Bay, Homosassa, Crystal River, and Cedar Key.[24][36]

Notable locations in South America include secluded beaches in Suriname and French Guiana.[37] In the Southern Atlantic Ocean, the most notable nesting grounds for Chelonia mydas are found on the island of Ascension,[24] hosts 6,000–13,000 turtle nests.[38][39][40]

Indo-Pacific subpopulation[edit]

Photo of turtle swimming towards surface with diver in background

About to break the surface for air at Kona, Hawaii

In the Pacific, its range reaches as far north as the southern coast of Alaska and as far south as Chile in the east. The turtle’s distribution in the western Pacific reaches north to Japan and southern parts of Russia’s Pacific coast, and as far south as the northern tip of New Zealand and a few islands south of Tasmania. Significant nesting grounds are scattered throughout the entire Pacific region, including Mexico, the Hawaiian Islands, the South Pacific, the northern coast of Australia, and Southeast Asia. Major Indian Ocean nesting colonies include India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and other coastal countries.[41]

The turtles can also be found throughout the Indian Ocean; the east coast of the African continent hosts a few nesting grounds, including islands in the waters around Madagascar.[41]

Specific nesting grounds[edit]

Nesting grounds are found all along the Mexican coast. These turtles feed in seagrass pastures in the Gulf of California.[42] Green turtles belonging to the distinct Hawaiian subpopulation nest at the protected French Frigate Shoals some 800 kilometers (500 mi) west of the Hawaiian Islands.[22]

In the Philippines, green turtles nest in the Turtle Islands along with closely related hawksbill turtles.[43]
In December 2007, fishermen using a hulbot-hulbot (a type of fish net) accidentally caught an 80 kg (180 lb), 93 cm (37 in) long and 82 cm (32 in) wide turtle off Barangay Bolong, Zamboanga City, Philippines. December is breeding season near the Bolong beach.[44]

Indonesia has a few nesting beaches, one in the Meru Betiri National Reserve in East Java.[45]

Off the north-eastern and northern coasts of Australia, the Great Barrier Reef has two genetically distinct populations; one north and one south. Within the reef, 20 separate locations consisting of small islands and cays were identified as nesting sites for either population of C. mydas. Of these, the most important is on Raine Island.[46][47] In the Torres Strait there is a large rookery on Bramble Cay.[48][49] The Coral Sea has nesting areas of world significance.[50]

Major nesting sites are common on either side of the Arabian Sea, both in Ash Sharqiyah, Oman, and along the coast of Karachi, Pakistan. Some specific beaches there, such as Hawke’s Bay and Sandspit, are common to both C. mydas and L. olivacea subpopulation. Sandy beaches along Sindh and Balochistan are nesting sites. Some 25 kilometers (16 mi) off the Pakistani coast, Astola island is another nesting beach.[8][51][52]

Galápagos green turtle[edit]

Green Sea Turtle Swimming in the Galápagos

The population that has often been known as the Galápagos green turtle have been recorded and observed in the Galápagos as far back as the 17th century by William Dampier.[53] Not much attention has been paid to them due to the overwhelming research done on the Galápagos giant tortoises.[54] Only over the last 30 years have extensive studies been performed covering the behaviors of the Galápagos green turtles. Much of the debate that has surrounded them recently is over the binomial classification of the species.[55] At one point the name Chelonia agassizii was applied to this population as a separate species.[17] Analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA of 15 nesting beaches,[55] however, has demonstrated that there is not only no significant distinction of this population but that it would be paraphyletic to recognise it. As such the species name Chelonia agassizzii is considered a junior synonym of Chelonia mydas [55] as such it is considered as a local variant of the populations of the East Pacific waters and those of other nesting areas.[55]

The morphological distinctiveness of the Galápagos green turtle has given rise to the debate,[17] but evidence of taxonomic distinctiveness is best served using the combination of multiple datasets. The two most notable morphological distinctions are the considerably smaller adult size and the much darker pigmentation of the carapace, plastron, and extremities.[17] Other distinctions are the curving of the carapace above each hind flipper, the more dome-shaped carapace, and the very long tail of adult males.[56]
Three possibilities have arisen from their unique characteristics: agassizii is a separate species from C. mydas, it is a subspecies of green sea turtle, or it is simply a color mutation.[56] These facts have led to the debate over binomial separation however due to the significance of the DNA testing results there have been no distinctions made at this time.[55] At a meeting for sea turtle scientists and their collaborators in 2000, the evidence for the taxonomic position of the Galápagos green turtle was reviewed and a majority among the participants supported treating it as a population or subspecies of the green turtle (instead of a separate species).[57] However, this is possibly a case of political taxonomy. As such the three major international checklists that cover turtles of the world Reptile Database[58] the checklist of Fritz and Havas (2007)[3] and the IUCN Checklist (TTWG 2017)[59] all consider this a junior synonym.

Habitat[edit]

Green sea turtles move across three habitat types, depending on their life stage. They lay eggs on beaches. Mature turtles spend most of their time in shallow, coastal waters with lush seagrass beds. Adults frequent inshore bays, lagoons, and shoals with lush seagrass meadows. Entire generations often migrate between one pair of feeding and nesting areas.[24] Green sea turtles, Chelonia mydas, are classified as an aquatic species and are distributed around the globe in warm tropical to subtropical waters. The environmental parameter that limits the distribution of the turtles is ocean temperatures below 7 to 10 degrees Celsius.[60] Within their geographical range, the green sea turtles generally stay near continental and island coastlines. Near the coastlines, the green sea turtles live within shallow bays and protected shores. In these protected shores and bays, the green sea turtle habitats include coral reefs, salt marshes, and nearshore seagrass beds. The coral reefs provide red, brown, and green algae for their diet and give protection from predators and rough storms within the ocean. The salt marshes and seagrass beds contain seaweed and grass vegetation, allowing ample habitat for the sea turtles.[32]

Turtles spend most of their first five years in convergence zones within the bare open ocean that surround them.[8][61] These young turtles are rarely seen as they swim in deep, pelagic waters.[62][63] Green sea turtles typically swim at 2.5–3 km/h (1.6–1.9 mph).[64]

Ecology and behavior[edit]

Turtle swimming toward surface

As one of the first sea turtle species studied, much of what is known of sea turtle ecology comes from studies of green turtles. The ecology of C. mydas changes drastically with each stage of its life history. Newly emerged hatchlings are carnivorous, pelagic organisms, part of the open ocean mininekton. In contrast, immature juveniles and adults are commonly found in seagrass meadows closer inshore as herbivorous grazers.

Diet[edit]

Green sea turtle grazing on seagrass

The diet of green turtles changes with age.[65] Juveniles are carnivorous, but as they mature they become omnivorous.[66] Young sea turtles eat fish eggs, sea hare eggs, hydrozoans, bryozoans,[67] molluscs, jellyfish, small invertebrates, worms, sponges, algae, and crustaceans.[68][32] Green sea turtles have a relatively slow growth rate because of the low nutritional value of their diet. Body fat turns green because of the consumed vegetation.[66] This diet shift has an effect on the green turtle’s skull morphology.[69] Their serrated jaw helps them chew green and red[70] algae (such as filamentous red alga (Bostrychia), red moss (Caloglossa), freshwater red algae (Compsopogon), lobster horns (Polysiphonia), sea lettuce (Ulva lactuca), green seaweed (Gayralia), and crinkle grass (Rhizoclonium))[71] and sea grasses.[72] They also consume large quantities of wetland plants such as Avicennia schaueriana and Sporobolus alterniflorus, which are commonly found in salt marshes.[73] Most adult sea turtles are strictly herbivorous.[66]

Predators and parasites[edit]

Only human beings and the larger sharks feed on C. mydas adults. Specifically, tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier) hunt adults in Hawaiian waters.[74] Juveniles and new hatchlings have significantly more predators, including crabs, small marine mammals and shorebirds.[6] Additionally, their eggs are vulnerable to predation by scavengers like red foxes and golden jackals.[75]

Green sea turtles have a variety of parasites including barnacles, leeches, protozoans, cestodes, and nematodes. Barnacles attach to the carapace, and leeches to the flippers and skin of the turtles, causing damage to the soft tissues and leading to blood loss. Protozoans, cestodes and nematodes lead to many turtle deaths because of the infections in the liver and intestinal tract they cause. The greatest disease threat to the turtle population is fibropapilloma, which produces lethal tumor growth on scales, lungs, stomach, and kidneys. Fibropapilloma is caused by a herpesvirus that is transmitted by leeches such as Ozobranchus branchiatus, a species of leech which feeds almost entirely on green sea turtles.[60][76]

Life cycle[edit]

Photo of newly hatched turtle held in human hand

Green sea turtles migrate long distances between feeding sites and nesting sites; some swim more than 2,600 kilometres (1,600 mi) to reach their spawning grounds. Beaches in Southeast Asia, India, islands in the western Pacific, and Central America are where green sea turtles breed.[7] Mature turtles often return to the exact beach from which they hatched. Females usually mate every two to four years. Males, on the other hand, visit the breeding areas every year, attempting to mate.[77] Mating seasons vary between populations. For most C. mydas in the Caribbean, mating season is from June to September.[24] The French Guiana nesting subpopulation nests from March to June.[37] In the tropics, green turtles nest throughout the year, although some subpopulations prefer particular times of the year. In Pakistan, Indian Ocean turtles nest year-round, but prefer the months of July to December.[51]

Sea turtles return to the beaches on which they were born to lay their own eggs. The reason for returning to native beaches may be that it guarantees the turtles an environment that has the necessary components for their nesting to be successful. These include a sandy beach, easy access for the hatchlings to get to the ocean, the right incubation temperatures, and low probability of predators that may feed on their eggs. Over time these turtles have evolved these tendencies to return to an area that has provided reproductive success for many generations. Their ability to return to their birthplace is known as natal homing.[78] The males also return to their birthplaces in order to mate. These males that return to their homes know they will be able to find mates because the females born there also return to breed. By doing this, the green sea turtles are able to improve their reproductive success and is why they are willing to expend the energy to travel thousands of miles across the ocean in order to reproduce.

Mating behaviour is similar to other marine turtles. Female turtles control the process. A few populations practice polyandry, although this does not seem to benefit hatchlings.[79] After mating in the water, the female moves above the beach’s high tide line, where she digs a hole 11-22 inches in depth with her hind flippers and deposits her eggs. The hole is then covered up again.[80] Clutch size ranges between 85 and 200, depending on the age of the female. This process takes about an hour to an hour and a half. After the nest is completely covered, she returns to the sea. The female will do this 3 to 5 times in one season.[7]

The eggs are round and white, and about 45 mm in diameter. The hatchlings remain buried for days until they all emerge together at night.[80] The temperature of the nest determines the sex of the turtles at around the 20-40 day mark.[81] At around 50 to 70 days,[82] the eggs hatch during the night, and the hatchlings instinctively head directly into the water. This is the most dangerous time in a turtle’s life. As they walk, predators, such as gulls and crabs, feed on them. A significant percentage never make it to the ocean. Little is known of the initial life history of newly hatched sea turtles.[24] Juveniles spend three to five years in the open ocean before they settle as still-immature juveniles into their permanent shallow-water lifestyle.[62][63] It is speculated that they take twenty to fifty years to reach sexual maturity. Individuals live up to eighty years in the wild.[6] It is estimated that only 1% of hatchlings reach sexual maturity.

Each year on Ascension Island in the South Atlantic, C. mydas females create 6,000 to 25,000 nests. They are among the largest green turtles in the world; many are more than a metre in length and weigh up to 300 kilograms (660 lb).[83]

Breathing and sleep[edit]

Sea turtles spend almost all their lives submerged, but must breathe air for the oxygen needed to meet the demands of vigorous activity. With a single explosive exhalation and rapid inhalation, sea turtles can quickly replace the air in their lungs. The lungs permit a rapid exchange of oxygen and prevent gases from being trapped during deep dives. Sea turtle blood can deliver oxygen efficiently to body tissues even at the pressures encountered during diving. During routine activity, green and loggerhead turtles dive for about four to five minutes, and surface to breathe for one to three seconds.

Turtles can rest or sleep underwater for several hours at a time, but submergence time is much shorter while diving for food or to escape predators. Breath-holding ability is affected by activity and stress, which is why turtles quickly drown in shrimp trawlers and other fishing gear.[29] During the night while sleeping and to protect themselves from potential predators, the adults wedge themselves under rocks below the surface and under ledges in reefs and coastal rocks. Many green sea turtles have been observed in returning to the same sleeping location night after night.[32]

Physiology and sensory modalities[edit]

Green sea turtles tend to have good vision, well adapted to a life at sea. The turtles can see many colors, but are most sensitive to light from violet to yellow or wavelengths of 400 to 600 nanometers. They do not see many colors in the orange to red portion of the light spectrum. On land, however, the sea turtles are nearsighted because the lenses in the eyes are spherical and adjusted to refraction underwater.[32] Sea turtles have no external ear and only one ear bone, called the columella. With one ear bone, the turtles can hear only low frequency sounds, from 200 to 700 Hz. Sounds can also be detected through vibrations of the head, backbone, and shell. The nose of the turtle has two external openings and connects to the roof of the mouth through internal openings. The lower surface of the nasal passage has two sets of sensory cells called the Jacobson’s organ. The turtle can use this organ to smell by pumping water in and out of its nose.[60]

Since green sea turtles migrate long distances during breeding seasons, they have special adaptive systems in order to navigate. In the open ocean, the turtles navigate using wave directions, sun light, and temperatures. The sea turtles also contain an internal magnetic compass. They can detect magnetic information by using magnetic forces acting on the magnetic crystals in their brains. Through these crystals, they can sense the intensity of Earth’s magnetic field and are able to make their way back to their nesting grounds or preferred feeding grounds.[60]

Natal homing is an animal’s ability to return to its birthplace in order to reproduce. Natal homing is found in all species of sea turtles and in other animals such as salmon. How these turtles are able to return to their birthplace is an interesting phenomenon. Many researchers believe that sea turtles use a process called imprinting, which is a special type of learning that occurs when turtles first hatch that allows them to recognize their native beach. There are two types of imprinting that are thought to be the reason turtles can find these beaches. The first is the chemical imprinting hypothesis. This hypothesis states that much like salmon, sea turtles are able to use olfactory cues and senses to smell their way home. However, a problem with this hypothesis is that some turtles travel thousands of miles to return to their native beaches, and the scents from that area aren’t likely to travel and be distinguishable from that distance.
The second hypothesis is the geomagnetic. This hypothesis states that as it hatches, a young turtle will imprint on the magnetic field of the beach they are born on. This hypothesis strongly correlates to the method which sea turtles use to navigate the earth.[78]

In order to tolerate the constant heat loss in the water, sea turtles have the ability to shunt blood away from tissues that are tolerant of low oxygen levels toward the heart, brain, and central nervous system. Other mechanisms include basking on warm beaches and producing heat through their activity and movements of their muscles. Basking turtles sometimes look like they are crying because behind the turtles eye is the lachrymal gland which stores excess salt from the sea water, which then expels through the turtles eye. In the winter months, turtles living at higher latitudes can hibernate for a short period in the mud.[84]

Unique characteristics and features[edit]

The green sea turtles exhibit sex differences by their development and appearance. As adult turtles, males are easily distinguishable from the females by having a longer tail (visibly extending past the shell) and longer claws on the front flippers. The hatching time and sex of the turtles are determined by the incubation temperature of the nest. Hatchings occur more quickly in nests that are warmer than nests that are in cooler conditions. Warm nesting sites above 30 degrees Celsius favor the development of females, whereas nesting sites below 30 degrees Celsius produce males. The position of the egg in the nest also affects sex-determination. Eggs in the center tend to hatch as females due to the warmer conditions within the nest.[32]

Green sea turtles play an essential role in the ecosystem in which they live. In the seagrass beds, the turtles feed on the seagrass by trimming only the top and leaving the roots of the plant. Through their feeding technique, the turtles help to improve the health and growth of the seagrass beds. The healthy seagrass beds that the turtles provide give habitat and feeding grounds for many species of fish and crustaceans. On the nesting beaches, the green sea turtles provide key nutrients for the ecosystem through their hatched egg shells. In their coral reef habitat, the green sea turtles have a symbiotic interaction with reef fish, including the yellow tang. The yellow tang fish swims along with the turtle and feeds on the algae, barnacles, and parasites on its shell and flippers. This species interaction provides food for the yellow tang and provides a necessary cleaning and smoothing of the turtle’s shell. This cleaning helps the turtles swim by reducing the amount of drag and improves their health.[60]

Importance to humans[edit]

Black-and-white photo of several turtles set on their backs

Harvested green turtles on a wharf at Key West, Florida

Historically, the turtles’ skin was tanned and used to make handbags, especially in Hawaii.[22] Ancient Chinese considered the flesh of sea turtles a culinary delicacy, including and especially C. mydas.[85] Particularly for this species, the turtle’s fat, cartilage, and flesh, known as calipee, are sought as ingredients for making turtle soup, a popular 19th-century English and American dish.[86][87][20]

In Java, Indonesia, sea turtle eggs were a popular delicacy. However, the turtle’s flesh is regarded as ḥarām or «unclean» under Islamic law (Islam is Java’s primary religion). In Bali, turtle meat was a prominent feature at ceremonial and religious feasts. Turtles were harvested in the remotest parts of the Indonesian archipelago.[88] Bali has been importing sea turtles since the 1950s, as its own turtle supplies became depleted.[89] The mostly Hindu Balinese do not eat the eggs, but sell them instead to local Muslims.

Commercial farms, such as the Cayman Turtle Farm in the West Indies, once bred them for commercial sale of turtle meat, turtle oil (rendered from the fat), turtle shell, and turtle leather made from the skin. The farm’s initial stock was in large part from «doomed» eggs removed from nests threatened by erosion, flooding, or in chemically hostile soil.[90] The farms held as many as 100,000 turtles at any one time. When the international markets were closed by regulations that did not allow even farm-bred turtle products to be exported internationally, the surviving farm became primarily a tourist attraction, supporting 11,000 turtles.[91] Initially started as Mariculture Ltd., then Cayman Turtle Farm Ltd and subsequently branded Boatswain’s Beach, in 2010 the farm’s brandname was changed to Cayman Turtle Farm: Island Wildlife Encounter.[92]

Sea turtles are integral to the history and culture of the Cayman Islands. When the islands were first discovered by Christopher Columbus in 1503, he named them «Las Tortugas» because of the abundance of sea turtles in the waters around the islands.[93] Many of the earliest visitors came to the Cayman Islands to capture the turtles as a source of fresh meat during long voyages. The green turtle is a national symbol displayed as part of the coat of arms of the Cayman Islands, which also forms part of the national flag of the Cayman Islands. The country’s currency uses a turtle as the watermark in its banknotes.[94] A stylised sea turtle nicknamed «Sir Turtle» is the mascot of the national airline Cayman Airways[95] and is part of the livery of its aircraft.

A ki’i pōhaku (petroglyph) of a green sea turtle (or honu) can be found on the Big Island of Hawaii in the Pu’u Loa lava fields. The green sea turtle has always held a special meaning for Hawaiians and this petroglyph shows its importance; it may date to when the Hawaiian Islands first became populated. The turtle symbolizes a navigator that can find his way home time after time. This symbol mirrors the real life of the green Hawaiian turtle as it will swim hundreds of miles to lay its eggs at its own place of birth. Though there are other myths as well, some Hawaiian legends say the honu were the first to guide the Polynesians to the Hawaiian Islands. Hawaiians revere the turtle and the legend of Kailua, a turtle who could take the form of a girl at will. In human form, she looked after the children playing on Punalu’u Beach.[96]

Conservation[edit]

Photo from front of swimming turtle

In recent decades, sea turtles have moved from unrestricted exploitation to global protection, with individual countries providing additional protection, although serious threats remain unabated.
All populations are considered «threatened».[97][98]

Threats[edit]

Human action presents both intentional and unintentional threats to the species’ survival. Intentional threats include continued hunting, poaching and egg harvesting. More dangerous are unintentional threats, including boat strikes, fishermen’s nets that lack turtle excluder devices, pollution and habitat destruction. Chemical pollution may create tumors;[99] effluent from harbors near nesting sites may create disturbances; and light pollution may disorient hatchlings. With chemical pollution present, there is a development of tar balls that is often eaten by green sea turtles in a confusion of their food. Tar balls cause the green sea turtle to intake toxins that can block their guts, displace the liver and intestines causing swelling of the tissue.[100] Habitat loss usually occurs due to human development of nesting areas. Beach-front construction, land «reclamation» and increased tourism are examples of such development.[6][8] An infectious tumor-causing disease, fibropapillomatosis, is also a problem in some populations. The disease kills a sizeable fraction of those it infects, though some individuals seem to resist the disease.[22][101][102] In addition, at least in the Southwestern Atlantic (Río de la Plata, Uruguay), exotic invasive species such as the rapa whelk Rapana venosa, were reported massively bio-fouling immature green turtles, reducing buoyancy, increasing drag, and causing severe injuries to the carapace.[103] Because of these threats, many populations are in a vulnerable state.

Pacific green turtles’ foraging habitats are poorly understood and mostly unknown.[104] These foraging grounds are most likely along the coast of Baja California, Mexico and southern California,[105] in which these turtles have a high risk of incidental capture by coastal fisheries. The main mortality factor for these turtles is the shrimp trawlers in Mexico, in which many of these turtles go undocumented.[105] The only foraging area that has been identified is the San Diego Bay, but it is heavily polluted with metals and PCBs.[105] These contaminants have a negative effect on the ocean environment, and have been shown to cause lesions and sometimes mortality.[105] Green turtles also are threatened by entanglement and ingestion of plastic.[105] In San Diego Bay, an adult green turtle was found dead with monofilament netting tightly packed in its esophagus.[105] In addition there are indications that global climate change is affecting the ability of green turtle populations in Australia to produce males due to their temperature-dependent sex determination and the rising temperatures in the northern Great Barrier Reef region.[106] Construction of new thermal power stations can raise local water temperature, which is also said to be a threat.[107]

Green sea turtles are the most commonly traded species along Java’s south coast and are sold in the form of whole, stuffed animals or turtle oil, locally known as «minyak bulus».[108]

The geographer James J. Parsons’ book titled The Green Turtle and Man played a special role in the conservation movement to save the species from extinction.[109]

Global initiatives[edit]

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has repeatedly listed green sea turtles in its Red List under differing criteria. In 1982, they officially classified it as an endangered species.[110] The 1986,[111] 1988,[112] 1990,[113] 1994,[114] and the landmark 1996 edition of the IUCN Red List, retained the listing.[115]

In 2001, Nicholas Mrosovsky filed a delisting petition, claiming some green turtle populations were large, stable and in some cases, increasing. At the time, the species was listed under the strict EN A1abd criteria. The IUCN Standards and Petitions Subcommittee ruled that visual counts of nesting females could not be considered «direct observation» and thus downgraded the species’ status to EN A1bd—retaining the turtle’s endangered status.[116]

In 2004, the IUCN reclassified C. mydas as endangered under the EN A2bd criteria, which essentially states the wild populations face a high risk of extinction because of several factors. These factors include a probable population reduction of more than 50% over the past decade as estimated from abundance indices and by projecting exploitation levels.[1]

On 3 May 2007, C. mydas was listed on Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) as a member of the family Cheloniidae.[117] The species was originally listed on Appendix II in 1975. The entire family was moved to Appendix I in 1977, with the exception of the Australian population of C. mydas. In 1981, the Australian population joined the rest. The Appendix I listing prohibits commercial international trade in the species (including parts and derivatives).[118] The Zoological Society of London has listed the reptile as an EDGE species.[119]

The Mediterranean population is listed as critically endangered.[6][20] The eastern Pacific, Hawaiian and Southern California subpopulations are designated threatened. Specific Mexican subpopulations are listed as endangered. The Florida population is listed as endangered. The World Wide Fund for Nature has labeled populations in Pakistan as «rare and declining».[52]

Since 1999, The Florida Aquarium has led extensive sea turtle rehabilitation efforts and visitor and community education & conservation platforms to advance sea turtle protection. Over a 20-year period, the Aquarium received 200 sea turtles, and while not all could be deemed releasable due to the nature of their injuries or illnesses, 180 were successfully released. In 2019, they opened a state-of-the-art Sea Turtle Rehabilitation Center in Apollo Beach, Florida. In the first year, The Florida Aquarium Animal Response Team managed the care of 21 sea turtles, initiated new foraging-readiness testing for release candidates in deep-dive tank, and released 14 animals. In 2020, they also initiated a study to better understand how micro-plastics are impacting the sea turtles in their care. In 2016, Florida enacted extensive protection measures. Florida Statutes (F.A.C. Rule 68E-1) restrict the take, possession, disturbance, mutilation, destruction, selling, transference, molestation, and harassment of marine turtles, nests or eggs. Protection is also afforded to marine turtle habitat. A specific authorization from Commission staff is required to conduct scientific, conservation, or educational activities that directly involve marine turtles in or collected from Florida, their nests, hatchlings or parts thereof, regardless of applicant’s possession of any federal permit.

In the State of Hawaii, specifically on the Island of Hawai’i (Hawaii County), state representative Faye Hanohano, a Native Hawaiian rights activist, pressed for a measure to delist C. mydas from protected status so that Native Hawaiians could legally harvest the turtles and possibly their eggs as well. The bill, HCR14, was largely overlooked by the media since at that point it was only a local issue. While the bill was passed in the United States House of Representatives, the United States Senate’s Committee on Energy and Environment refused to hear it, which meant that the bill did not go on to be heard by the Senate.[120]

Country-specific initiatives[edit]

In addition to management by global entities such as the IUCN and CITES, specific countries around the world have undertaken conservation efforts.

The Indonesian island of Bali has traditional uses that were considered sustainable, but have been questioned considering greater demand from the larger and wealthier human population. The harvest was the most intensive in the world.[88] In 1999, Indonesia restricted turtle trade and consumption because of the decreasing population and threat of a tourist boycott. It rejected a request made by Bali Governor I Made Mangku Pastika in November 2009 to set a quota of 1,000 turtles to be killed in Hindu religious ceremonies. While conservationists respect the need for turtles in rituals, they wanted a smaller quota.[121]

Multiple protected areas of the Philippines have significant green sea turtle nesting and feeding sites. The most notable is Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary, an UNESCO tentative site which encompasses an entire municipality and one of Southeast Asia’s most important green sea turtle nesting sites.[122] Other notable sites include the UNESCO tentative site of El Nido-Taytay Management Resource Protected Area and the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park. The species is protected under Republic Act 9147 or the Wildlife Resources Conservation and Protection Act, while the sites where they live and nest are protected under the National Integrated Protected Areas System Act.[123]

Ecotourism is one initiative in Sabah, Malaysia. The island of Pulau Selingan is home to a turtle hatchery. Staff people place some of the eggs laid each night in a hatchery to protect them from predators. Incubation takes around sixty days. When the eggs hatch, tourists assist in the release of the baby turtles into the sea.[124]

The Hawaiian subpopulation has made a remarkable comeback and is now one focus of ecotourism and has become something of a state mascot. Students of Hawaii Preparatory Academy on the Big Island have tagged thousands of specimens since the early 1990s.[22]

In the United Kingdom the species is protected by a Biodiversity Action Plan, due to excess harvesting and marine pollution.[125] The Pakistani-branch of the World Wide Fund for Nature has been initiating projects for secure turtle hatching since the 1980s. However, the population has continued to decline.[8]

In the Atlantic, conservation initiatives have centered around Caribbean nesting sites. The Tortuguero nesting beaches in Costa Rica have been the subject of egg-collection limits since the 1950s. The Tortuguero National Park was formally established in 1976, in part, to protect that region’s nesting grounds.[34] On Ascension Island, which contains some of the most important nesting beaches, an active conservation program has been implemented.[126] Karumbé has been monitoring foraging and developmental areas of juvenile green turtles in Uruguay since 1999.[127]

Cayman Turtle Farm located in Grand Cayman in the northwest Caribbean Sea is the first farm to have achieved the second generation of green sea turtles bred, laid, hatched, and raised in captivity.[128] Since its beginning in 1968, the farm has released over 31,000 turtles into the wild,[93] and each year more captive-bred turtles are released into the Caribbean Sea from beaches around the island of Grand Cayman.[129] Captive-bred turtles released from the farm as hatchlings or yearlings with «living tags,» have now begun to return to nest on Grand Cayman as adults.[130][131] On February 19, 2012 the farm released the first 2nd-generation captive-bred green sea turtle equipped with a Position Tracking Transponder, or PTT[132] (also known as a satellite tag).[133] In addition, the farm provides turtle meat products to the local population for whom turtle has been part of the traditional cuisine for centuries. In so doing, the farm curtails the incentive to take turtles from the wild,[134] which over the years in addition to the Cayman Turtle Farm’s release of captive-bred turtles has enabled an increase in the number of turtles sighted in the waters around the island of Grand Cayman and nesting on its beaches.[135]

In the Pacific, green sea turtles nest on the motu (islets) in the Funafuti Conservation Area, a marine conservation area covering 33 square kilometers (12.74 square miles) of reef, lagoon and motu on the western side of Funafuti atoll in Tuvalu.[136]

On Raine Island, up to 100,000 nesting females have been observed in a season, with the cay producing 90% of the region’s green turtles. However, the hatching rate declined in the 1990s, and a further decline in the population was threatened by the deaths of thousands of females as they struggled to climb the small sandy cliffs. In addition, as the shape of the island had changed over time, the spread of the beaches outwards had led to greater risk of inundation of the turtle nests. Between 2011 and 2020, a collaborative project by the Queensland Government, BHP (as corporate sponsor), the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, Great Barrier Reef Foundation, and Wuthathi and Meriam traditional owners, reshaped the island using heavy machinery in a way that gave the female turtles a smoother passage and reduced the risk of nest inundation. A sophisticated monitoring and research system, using 3D modelling, satellite technology and drones was employed, and monitoring continues.[137]

As of June 2020, a project called «The Turtle Cooling Project» is being undertaken by scientists from the World Wildlife Fund Australia, University of Queensland, Deakin University and the Queensland Government. It is looking at the effect of global warming on northern green turtle breeding, in particular the effect of producing more male turtles owing to the higher temperatures. They are working in the area around Raine Island, Heron Island and Moulter Cay.[138]

Genetics[edit]

The genome of Chelonia mydas was sequenced in 2013 to examine the development and evolution of the turtle body plan.[139]

See also[edit]

  • Sea Turtle Association of Japan, Kuroshima Research Station
  • T.K. Bellis The «Turtle King».

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Seminoff, J.A.; et al. (Southwest Fisheries Science Center, U.S.) (2004). «Chelonia mydas«. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004: e.T4615A11037468. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T4615A11037468.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ «Appendices | CITES». cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ a b Fritz, Uwe; Peter Havaš (2007). «Checklist of Chelonians of the World» (PDF). Vertebrate Zoology. 57 (2): 165–167. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 1, 2011. Retrieved May 29, 2012.
  4. ^ Swash, A. & Still, R. (2005). Birds, Mammals, and Reptiles of the Galápagos Islands. Second Edition. Hampshire, UK:WildGuides Ltd. p.116.
  5. ^ a b «Chelonia mydas«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h «Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas)». National Geographic – Animals. National Geographic Society. December 29, 2005. Archived from the original on 2007-02-05. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  7. ^ a b c Ferri, Vincenzo (2002). Turtles & Tortoises. Buffalo, New York: Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1-55209-631-4.
  8. ^ a b c d e «Green Sea Turtle – Chelonia mydas japonica«. Turtles of Pakistan. Wildlife of Pakistan. 2003. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  9. ^ «Green sea turtle».
  10. ^ Aplin, K.P.; Smith, L.A. (2001). «Checklist of the frogs and reptiles of Westem Australia» (PDF). Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement. 6 (3): 51–74. doi:10.18195/issn.0313-122x.63.2001.051-074. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  11. ^ Bowen, Brian W.; Nelson, William S.; Avise, John C. (June 15, 1993). «A Molecular Phylogeny for Marine Turtles: Trait Mapping, Rate Assessment, and Conservation Relevance». Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 90 (12): 5574–5577. Bibcode:1993PNAS…90.5574B. doi:10.1073/pnas.90.12.5574. PMC 46763. PMID 8516304.
  12. ^ «Testudo mydas«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  13. ^ Chelonia agassizi is a commonly cited misspelling of this taxon.
  14. ^ «Chelonia agassizi«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  15. ^ Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. (Chelonia mydas agasizii, p. 2).
  16. ^ «Chelonia agassizii«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  17. ^ a b c d Karl, Stephen H.; Brian W. Bowen (1999). «Evolutionary Significant Units versus Geopolitical Taxonomy: Molecular Systematics of an Endangered Sea Turtle (genus Chelonia)». Conservation Biology. 13 (5): 990–999. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.97352.x. S2CID 85192260.
  18. ^ «Chelonia mydas agassizi«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  19. ^ «Chelonia mydas mydas«. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 23, 2007.
  20. ^ a b c «green turtle». Marine Turtles. Marine Conservation Society. 2007. Archived from the original on August 22, 2007. Retrieved August 30, 2007.
  21. ^ Mary Kawena Pukui and Samuel Hoyt Elbert (2003). «lookup of honu«. in Hawaiian Dictionary. Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library, University of Hawaii Press.
  22. ^ a b c d e Glick, Daniel (September 2005). «Back from the Brink». Smithsonian Magazine: 54–55. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  23. ^ Balazs, G.H.; Southwest Fisheries Center (U.S.) (1980). Synopsis of Biological Data on the Green Turtle in the Hawaiian Islands. NOAA-TM-NMFS-SWFC. Vol. 7. Honolulu, Hawaii: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service.
  24. ^ a b c d e f «Green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas)». North Florida Field Office. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. December 29, 2005. Archived from the original on June 29, 2017. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  25. ^ Kindersley, Dorling (2005). Animal. New York City: DK Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7894-7764-4.
  26. ^ «SEA TURTLES — Physical Characteristics». Archived from the original on 2013-07-28. Retrieved 2012-04-03.
  27. ^ «Species Fact Sheet: Green Sea Turtle». Caribbean Conservation Corporation & Sea Turtle Survival League. Caribbean Conservation Corporation. December 29, 2005. Archived from the original on February 24, 2007. Retrieved February 22, 2007.
  28. ^ «National Geographic». Green Sea Turtle. 11 April 2010.
  29. ^ a b «Green Sea Turtle». MarineBio.org. May 21, 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2007.
  30. ^ Boulenger, G. A. (1890). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Reptilia and Batrachia. London: Taylor & Francis. pp. 541. ISBN 978-0-548-96848-2.
  31. ^ Bowen, B.W., Meylan, A.B.; Ross, J.P.; Limpus, C.J.; Balazs, G.H.; Avise, J.C.. (1992) Global population structure and natural history of the green turtle (Chelonia mydas) in terms of matriarchal phylogeny. Evolution. International Journal of Organic Evolution. Vol. 46, No 4, pp. 865–881
  32. ^ a b c d e f Spotila, J. (2004). Sea Turtles: A Complete Guide to their Biology, Behavior, and Conservation. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  33. ^ Connolly, Norma (June 2, 2011). «More turtles nesting in Cayman». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. (Quoted Ebanks-Petrie, Gina and Blumenthal, Janice of the Department of the Environment, Cayman Islands)
  34. ^ a b Bjorndal, Karen A.; Jerry A. Wetherall; Alan B. Bolten; Jeanne A. Mortimer (February 1999). «Twenty-Six Years of Green Turtle Nesting at Tortuguero, Costa Rica: An Encouraging Trend». Conservation Biology. 13 (1): 126–134. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.97329.x. S2CID 86436582.
  35. ^ Lahanas, P. N.; K. A. Bjorndal; A. B. Bolten; S. E. Encalada; M. M. Miyamoto; R. A. Valverde; B. W. Bowen (1998). «Genetic composition of a green turtle (Chelonia mydas) feeding ground population: evidence for multiple origins» (PDF). Marine Biology. 130 (3): 345–352. doi:10.1007/s002270050254. S2CID 30428806. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2007. Retrieved September 1, 2007.
  36. ^ Audubon, Maria R. (1986). Audubon and His Journals: Dover Publications Reprint. New York: Scribner’s Sons. pp. 373–375. ISBN 978-0-486-25144-8.
  37. ^ a b Girondot, Marc; Jacques Fretey (1996). «Leatherback Turtles, Dermochelys coriacea, Nesting in French Guiana, 1978–1995″. Chelonian Conservation and Biology. 2: 204–208. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2007.
  38. ^ Seminoff, Jeffrey A. (2002). IUCN 2002 Red List Global Status Assessment: Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) (PDF). of the World Conservation Union (IUCN). p. 93. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-12-17.
  39. ^ Godley, Brendan J.; Annette C. Broderick; Graeme C. Hays (February 2001). «Nesting of green turtles (Chelonia mydas) at Ascension Island, South Atlantic». Biological Conservation. 97 (2): 151–158. doi:10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00107-5.
  40. ^ Broderick, Annette C.; Brendan J. Godley; Graeme C. Hays (2001). «Monitoring and conservation of marine turtles of Ascension Island: a sustainable resource». Interim Report to Foreign and Commonwealth Office Environment Fund for the Overseas Territories. p. 13.
  41. ^ a b Green turtle nesting sites (Map). Cartography by Center for Marine Conservation. Caribbean Conservation Corporation. 1961. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  42. ^ Seminoff, Jeffrey A.; Javier Alvarado; Carlos Delgado; Jose Luis Lopez; Gabriel Hoeffer (June 2002). «First Direct Evidence of Migration by an East Pacific Green Seaturtle from Michoacan, Mexico to a Feeding Ground on the Sonoran Coast of the Gulf of California». The Southwestern Naturalist. 47 (2): 314–316. doi:10.2307/3672922. JSTOR 3672922.
  43. ^ «Ocean Ambassadors – Philippine Turtle Islands». Coastal Resource & Fisheries Management of the Philippines. OneOcean.org. Retrieved February 6, 2007.
  44. ^
    Abs-Cbn Interactive, Green sea turtle caught in Zamboanga.
  45. ^ Indonesian Sea Turtle Conservation (PDF). Yayasan, Indonesia: World Wide Fund for Nature, Indonesia. p. 4. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  46. ^ Dobbs, Kirstin (2007). Marine turtle and dugong habitats in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park used to implement biophysical operational principles for the Representative Areas Program (PDF). Great Barrier Marine Park Authority. ISBN 978-1-876945-58-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-18.
  47. ^ Tucker, Anton D.; Mark A. Read (September 2001). «Frequency of Foraging by Gravid Green Turtles (Chelonia mydas) at Raine Island, Great Barrier Reef». Journal of Herpetology. 35 (3): 500–503. doi:10.2307/1565970. JSTOR 1565970.
  48. ^ «Melomys rubicola — Bramble Cay Melomys». Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment, Australian Government. 22 August 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  49. ^ Ellison, Joanna (1998). «Natural History of Bramble Cay, Torres Strait» (PDF). Atoll Research Bulletin. 455: 1–31. doi:10.5479/si.00775630.455.1. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  50. ^ C.Michael Hogan. 2011. Coral Sea. Encyclopedia of Earth. Eds. P.Saundry & C.J.Cleveland. National Council for Science and the Environment. Washington DC
  51. ^ a b Butler, E.; A. Astola (1877). «A summer cruise in the Gulf of Oman». Stray Feathers. 5: 283–304.
  52. ^ a b Groombridge, Brian; Aban Marker Kabraji; Abdul Latif Rao (1988). «Marine Turtles in Baluchistan (Pakistan)». Marine Turtle Newsletter. 42: 1–3. Retrieved August 30, 2007.
  53. ^ Green, Derek (1993). «Growth Rates of Wild Immature Green Turtles in the Galápagos Islands, Ecuador». Journal of Herpetology. 27 (3): 338–341. doi:10.2307/1565159. JSTOR 1565159.
  54. ^ Pritchard, Peter C (1971). «Galápagos Sea Turtles – Preliminary Findings». Journal of Herpetology. 5 (1/2): 1–9. doi:10.2307/1562836. JSTOR 1562836.
  55. ^ a b c d e Parham, J. F.; Zug, G. R. (1996). «Chelonia agassizii – Valid Or Not?». Marine Turtle Newsletter. 72: 2–5.
  56. ^ a b Pritchard, Peter C. H. (1999). «Status of the black sea turtle». Conservation Biology. 13 (5): 1000–1003. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.98432.x. S2CID 84867842.
  57. ^ Bowen, B. W.; Karl, S. A. «Status of the East Pacific Green Turtle (Chelonia agassizii)». Marine Turtle Newsletter. 89: 20–22.
  58. ^ Uetz, P.; Freed, P.; Hošek, J. (eds.). «Chelonia mydas«. The Reptile Database. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  59. ^ Rhodin, A.G.J.; Iverson, J.B.; Bour, R. Fritz; Georges, U.; Shaffer, H.B. & van Dijk, P.P. (2017). Rhodin, A.G.J.; Iverson, J.B.; van Dijk, P.P.; Saumure, R.A.; Buhlmann, K.A.; Pritchard, P.C.H. & Mittermeier, R.A. (eds.). Turtles of the World: Annotated Checklist and Atlas of Taxonomy, Synonymy, Distribution, and Conservation Status. Chelonian Research Monographs. Conservation Biology of Freshwater Turtles and Tortoises: A Compilation Project of the IUCN/SSC Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group. Vol. 7 (8th ed.). pp. 1–292. doi:10.3854/crm.7.checklist.atlas.v8.2017. ISBN 9781532350269.
  60. ^ a b c d e Ruckdeschel, C. and Shoop, C. R. 2006. Sea Turtles of the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of the United States. A Wormsloe Foundation nature book; Wormsloe Foundation nature book. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
  61. ^ «Green Turtle, Chelonia mydas«. Fisheries: Office of Protected Resources. U. S. National Oceanographic Atmospheric Administration. 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2007.
  62. ^ a b Reich, Kimberly J.; Karen A. Bjorndal; Alan B. Bolten (September 18, 2007). «The ‘lost years’ of green turtles: using stable isotopes to study cryptic lifestages». Biology Letters. 3 (6): 712–4. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0394. PMC 2391226. PMID 17878144.
  63. ^ a b Brynner, Jeanna (September 19, 2007). «Sea Turtles’ Mystery Hideout Revealed». LiveScience. Imaginova Corp. Retrieved September 20, 2007.
  64. ^ P. Luschi, G. C. Hays, C. Del Seppia, R. Marsh, and F. Papi. (1998) The navigational feats of green sea turtles
    migrating from Ascension Island investigated by satellite telemetry. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B.
  65. ^ Arthur, Karen; Boyle, Michelle; Limpus, Colin (June 30, 2008). «Ontogenetic Changes in Diet and Habitat Use in Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas) Life History» (PDF). Mar Ecol Prog Ser. 362: 303–311. Bibcode:2008MEPS..362..303A. doi:10.3354/meps07440. Retrieved Dec 20, 2015.
  66. ^ a b c Devaux, Bernard (2000). On the Trail of Sea Turtles. Paris, France: Barron’s Nature Travel Guides. ISBN 978-0-7641-1162-4.
  67. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  68. ^ Devaux, Bernard (2000). On the Trail of Sea Turtles. Barron’s Nature Travel Guides. ISBN 978-0-7641-1162-4.
  69. ^ http://www.nwf.org/wildlife/wildlife-library/amphibians-reptiles-and-fish/sea-turtles/green-sea-turtle.aspxNishizawa, H., M. Asahara, N. Kamezaki, and N. Arai. 2010. Differences in the skull morphology between juvenile and adult green turtles: implications for the ontogenetic diet shift. Current Herpetology 29(2): 97–101. [1]
  70. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  71. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  72. ^ «Green Sea Turtle». National Wildlife Federation.
  73. ^ «Chelonia mydas (Green Turtle)».
  74. ^ «Hawaiian Green Sea Turtle». Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. September 5, 2002. Archived from the original on August 16, 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2007.
  75. ^ Predation on green turtle Chelonia mydas nests by wild canids at Akyatan beach, Turkey by L. Brown and D. W. Macdonald, Biological Conservation, Volume 71, Issue 1, 1995, pp. 55–60.
  76. ^ McGowin, A.E.; Truong, T.M.; Corbett, A.M.; Clark, Dave (2011). «Genetic barcoding of marine leeches (Ozobranchus spp.) from Florida sea turtles and their divergence in host specificity». Molecular Ecology Resources. 11 (2): 271–278. doi:10.1111/j.1755-0998.2010.02946.x. PMID 21429133. S2CID 34067696.
  77. ^ «Australian Threatened Species: Green turtle (Chelonia mydas(PDF) (Press release). Government of Australia. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 11, 2007. Retrieved August 15, 2007.
  78. ^ a b Wynekey, J.; Lohmann, J.K.; Musick, J.A. 2013. The biology of sea turtles. CRC Press. Vol 3. Pp 59–70
  79. ^ Lee, Patricia L. M.; Graeme C. Hays (April 27, 2004). «Polyandry in a marine turtle: Females make the best of a bad job». Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 101 (17): 6530–6535. Bibcode:2004PNAS..101.6530L. doi:10.1073/pnas.0307982101. PMC 404079. PMID 15096623.
  80. ^ a b Bonin, Franck (2006). Turtles of the World. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore. ISBN 978-0-8018-8496-2.
  81. ^ Spotila, J. R. (2004). Sea turtles: a complete guide to their biology, behavior, and conservation. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  82. ^ «Green turtle». wwf.panda.org. Retrieved 2015-10-19.
  83. ^ Fowler, Stephen (April 21, 2002). «About The Green Turtle on Ascension». Turtles. Ascension Island Heritage Society. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  84. ^ Lutz, P. L., Musick, J. A., and Wyneken, J. 1997. The Biology of Sea Turtles. Marine Science series; Marine science series; CRC marine biology series. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
  85. ^ Schafer, Edward H. (1962). «Eating Turtles in Ancient China». Journal of the American Oriental Society. 82 (1): 73–74. doi:10.2307/595986. JSTOR 595986.
  86. ^ Clarkson, Janet (2010). Soup: a global history. London: Reaktion. pp. 115–118. ISBN 978-1-86189-774-9. OCLC 642290114.
  87. ^ The Country Housewife and Lady’s Director, by Prof. R. Bradley, 1728
  88. ^ a b Whitten, T; Soeriaatmadja, R. E.; Suraya A. A. (1996). The Ecology of Java and Bali. Hong Kong: Periplus Editions Ltd. pp. 756–760. ISBN 978-962-593-072-5.
  89. ^
    Sumertha, I.N. 1974. Perikanan penyu dan cara pengelolaan di Indonesia. Dokumen. Kom. IPB 8: 1–18. Cited in Whitten, T; Soeriaatmadja, R. E.; Suraya A. A. (1996). The Ecology of Java and Bali. Hong Kong: Periplus Editions Ltd. p. 757. ISBN 978-962-593-072-5.
  90. ^ Fosdick, Peggy & Sam (1994). Last chance lost?: can and should farming save the green sea turtle?. York, PA, USA: Irvin S. Naylor. pp. 73, 90.
  91. ^ Morriss, Andrew. «Survival of the Sea Turtle: Cayman Turtle Farm Starts Over». PERC Reports. Property and Environment Research Center. Archived from the original on 2012-07-23. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  92. ^ «About Us: 2010». Cayman Turtle Farm. Archived from the original on May 7, 2012. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  93. ^ a b «Turtle release set». Caymanian Compass. October 23, 2007. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  94. ^ «Fresh, new banknotes ready». Caymanian Compass. April 6, 2011. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  95. ^ McGowan, Cliodhna (May 13, 2007). «Sir Turtle to keep flying». Caymanian Compass.
  96. ^ www.HawaiianLife.com
  97. ^ Fisheries, NOAA. «Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) :: NOAA Fisheries». www.nmfs.noaa.gov. Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  98. ^ «Green Sea Turtles of Florida, Mexico No Longer Endangered». U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Discovery News. 2016. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
  99. ^ Kessler, Rebecca (November 9, 2010). «Sea Turtle Herpes Tumors Linked to Sewage?». National Geographic News. Retrieved November 9, 2010.
  100. ^ Shigenaka, Gary; Milton, Sarah; Lutz, Peter; Shigenaka, Gary; Hoff, Rebecca Z.; Yender, Ruth A.; Mearns, Alan J. (1 August 2003). Oil and Sea Turtles: Biology, Planning, and Response (PDF) (1 ed.). Florida: U.S. Department Of Commerce: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. pp. 35–46. doi:10.13140/2.1.1774.0486. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  101. ^ Herbst, Lawrence H. (September 2000). «Marine Turtle Fibropapillomatosis: Hope Floats in a Sea of Ignorance». Proceedings of the 19th Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Conservation and Biology. 19: 39–40. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-443.
  102. ^ Moncada, Felix; Adela Prieto (September 2000). «Incidence of Fibropapillomas in the Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) in Cuban Waters». Proceedings of the 19th Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Conservation and Biology. 19: 40–41. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-443.
  103. ^ Lezama, C., Carranza, A., Fallabrino, A., Estrades, A., Scarabino, F., & López-Mendilaharsu, M. (2013). Unintended backpackers: bio-fouling of the invasive gastropod Rapana venosa on the green turtle Chelonia mydas in the Río de la Plata Estuary, Uruguay. Biological invasions, 15(3), 483–487
  104. ^ Seminoff (2002). «Home range of green turtles Chelonia mydas at a coastal foraging area in the Gulf of California, Mexico». Mar Ecol Prog Ser. 242: 253–265. Bibcode:2002MEPS..242..253S. doi:10.3354/meps242253.
  105. ^ a b c d e f National Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1998. Recovery Plan for U.S. Pacific Populations of the East Pacific Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas). National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD.
  106. ^ «Some Great Barrier Reef turtle populations produce nothing but females». 2018.
  107. ^ «Coal-fired plant project threatens endangered sea turtles on Turkey’s Mediterranean shores». bianet. 15 June 2020.
  108. ^ Nijman, Vincent (2015). «Decades long open trade in protected marine turtles along java’s south coast». Marine Turtle Newsletter – via ResearchGate.
  109. ^ William M. Denevan. «James J. Parsons, 1915-1997». in Patrick H. Artmstrong and Geoffrey J. Martin. editors on behalf of the Commission on the History of Geographical Thought of the International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science. (2000). Geographers : biobibliographical studies, v. 19. Strand, London ; New York, NY : Mansell Publishing Limited. p. 90. ISBN 0720123771.
  110. ^ Groombridge, B. (1982). The IUCN Amphibia-Reptilia Red Data Book, Part 1: Testudines, Crocodylia, Rhynocehapalia. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
  111. ^ IUCN Conservation Monitoring Centre (1986). 1986 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK: IUCN. ISBN 978-2-88032-605-0.
  112. ^ IUCN Conservation Monitoring Centre (1988). 1988 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK: IUCN. ISBN 9782880329358.
  113. ^ IUCN (1990). 1990 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK.: IUCN.
  114. ^ Groombridge, B. (1994). 1994 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN. ISBN 978-2-8317-0194-3.
  115. ^ Groombridge, B.; Baillie (1996). 1996 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
  116. ^ Red List Standards; Petitions Subcommittee (October 18, 2001). «Ruling of the IUCN Red List Standards and Petitions Subcommittee on Petitions against the 1996 Listings of Four Marine Turtle Species, 18 October 2001» (PDF). International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 December 2006. Retrieved February 5, 2007.
  117. ^ CITES (May 3, 2007). «Appendices». Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna. Archived from the original (SHTML) on December 29, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  118. ^ UNEP-WCMC. «Chelonia mydas A-301.003.002.002″. UNEP-WCMC Species Database: CITES-Listed Species. United Nations Environment Programme – World Conservation Monitoring Centre. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  119. ^ «Green Turtle». EDGE of Existence. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  120. ^ Callis, Tom (4 April 2013). «Turtle report months away». Hawaii Tribune Herald. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  121. ^ Karmini, Niniek (November 27, 2009). «Indonesia rejects Bali plan for turtle sacrifices». Associated Press. Archived from the original on November 27, 2009. Retrieved November 27, 2009.
  122. ^ «Turtle Islands Wildlife Sanctuary».
  123. ^ «Protecting the endangered ‘pawikan’ | Jonathan L. Mayuga». BusinessMirror. 15 October 2017.
  124. ^ «Selingan Turtle Island». Borneo: Journey Malaysia. Dolphin Diaries Travel Sdn Bhd. 2007. Archived from the original on July 22, 2015. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  125. ^ «Grouped Species Action Plan: Grouped plan for marine turtles». UK Biodiversity Action Plan. UK Joint Nature Conservation Committee. 2006. Archived from the original on August 5, 2007. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  126. ^ «Ascension Conservation». Ascension Conservation, Wildlife. Ascension Conservation. 2007. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved September 16, 2007.
  127. ^ Karumbé
  128. ^ «History: 1989». Cayman Turtle Farm. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  129. ^ Fuller, Brent (November 18, 2011). «Little turtles swimming for it». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  130. ^ Bell, Catherine; Parsons J; Austin TJ; Broderick AC; Ebanks-Petrie G; Godley GJ (25 April 2005). «Some of them came home: the Cayman Turtle Farm headstarting project for the green turtle Chelonia mydas«. Oryx. 39 (2): 137–148. doi:10.1017/S0030605305000372.
  131. ^ Connolly, Norma (June 2, 2011). «More turtles nesting in Cayman». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. five turtles with tags from the Cayman Turtle Farm were observed nesting on Seven Mile Beach
  132. ^ Position Tracking
  133. ^ Cayman Turtle Farm. «Cayman Turtle Farm Green Sea Turtle Releases». SeaTurtle.org. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  134. ^ Brammer, Jeff (October 16, 2011). «What if the turtle farm went belly up?». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. presenting disincentives to poachers due to the commercial availability of turtle meat
  135. ^ Connolly, Norma (June 2, 2011). «More turtles nesting in Cayman». Caymanian Compass. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2012. (Quoted Ebanks-Petrie, Gina and Blumenthal, Janice of Department of the Environment, Cayman Islands)
  136. ^ «Tuvalu Funafuti Conservation Area». Ministry of Communication, Transport and Tourism – Government of Tuvalu. Archived from the original on 2011-11-02. Retrieved 28 Oct 2011.
  137. ^ Kim, Sharnie; Rigby, Mark (12 June 2020). «Green turtle rookery on Raine Island brought back from brink, but scientists’ fight not over yet». ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  138. ^ Kilvert, Nick (12 June 2020). «Turning female: The race to save the northern green turtle». ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  139. ^ Wang Z.; Pascual-Anaya, J.; Zadissa A. (2013). «The draft genomes of the soft-shell turtle and green sea turtle yield insights into the development and evolution of the turtle-specific body plan». Nature Genetics. 45 (6): 701–706. doi:10.1038/ng.2615. PMC 4000948. PMID 23624526.

External links[edit]

  • «Chelonia mydas «. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 21, 2007.
  • Seminoff (2004). «Chelonia mydas«. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2004. Retrieved 9 May 2006.

  • Images and movies (Chelonia mydas) — ARKive (archived 20 March 2006)
  • US National Marine Fisheries Service green sea turtle page
  • Floridian and Mexican populations—US Fish and Wildlife Service
  • Desktop wallpaper & fun green turtle facts
  • Green turtle video – Macaulay Library
  • Baby green sea turtles – Open Water 859 (video on YouTube)
  • Photos of Green sea turtle on Sealife Collection

  • Рассказ про жизнь александра сергеевича пушкина
  • Рассказ про зебру для детей 1 класса
  • Рассказ про живую шляпу читать
  • Рассказ про здоровье для детей
  • Рассказ про живую природу