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Sunset Beach Turtle Program. What you can do to help. Who Are We?. The Sunset Beach Turtle Patrol Volunteers for NC Wildlife Resource Commission: Division of Wildlife Concerned Citizens Friends of Nature. What do we do?. Walk beach daily Verify sea turtle nests
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Sunset Beach Turtle Program What you can do to help
Who Are We? • The Sunset Beach Turtle Patrol • Volunteers for NC Wildlife Resource Commission: Division of Wildlife • Concerned Citizens • Friends of Nature
What do we do? • Walk beach daily • Verify sea turtle nests • Place signs and mark off nests • Monitor nests during incubation period • Observe nest until it hatches • Assist directing hatchlings to the sea • Report live/dead strandings to the State • Perform necropsies when necessary
We also…. • Recruit volunteers annually • Provide a new volunteer orientation • Walk beach, educate the public, & monitor nests - May 1 thru August 31 • Provide educational programs to the schools and social groups • Provide fundraising to support our program and the Topsail Sea Turtle Hospital
What do we need from you? • Public awareness of sea turtles • Education of beach goers • Volunteers • Solicitation of funds for supplies and education materials.
Loggerhead Leather back Green Olive Ridley Kemp’s Ridley Hawksbill The Sea Turtles
Tracks In Tracks out
THE NEST • Notification • Volunteers patrol the beach daily • Discovered nests are observed daily • Nest/Eggs are located • Identify a “true” nest or “False Crawl” • Area is secured with signs and other identifying materials to protect it
Emerging From the Egg The hatchlings have an egg tooth which they use to break the egg to emerge from the egg.
3 to 4 days 3 to 4 days after emerging from the egg turtles make their way up out of the nest and head to the ocean
Hatched Nest and to the Ocean
Hatched Eggs72 Hours after a hatching The nest is inventoried and data reported to the state # of hatched eggs # of infertile eggs # of piped eggs # of dead hatchings
Satellite Transmitter Used to track the movements of turtles across the oceans. Location depth, duration of recent dives. Data provides insight into migration and navigation.
We’ve incubated for 65 days, hatched and waited for several days in our nest, and now ready to head to the ocean – Our Home
NaturalThreats (including Humans) • Artificial Lighting (house, bridge, stores, etc.) • Beach and Coastal Development • Boating – Propeller strikes, vessel collisions, jet ski and other recreational activities • Fishing – hooks, gill nets, long line fishing • Marine Debris cause choking, toxic etc. • Pollution – (oil spills) algae bloom, storm water runoff, garbage both on and off the beach • Products made from turtles – Jewelry, hair ornaments – tourism
Conservation • Management Efforts: • Informing the public • Satellite Telemetry • Tags • Legislative tools • The U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) • Archie Carr National Wildlife Refuge • Nesting and nest protection • Involving the public
Predators of Sea Turtles • Eggs and hatchlings • Raccoons, sea birds, • Foxes, ants, crabs, • Opossums and coyotes • Juveniles • Sea Birds and Fish • Teenager and Adults • Killer Whales • Variety of sharks • Sharks are a larger problem because they feed both day and night
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