Sea Turtle Season Well Underway - SanibelCaptivaNews.com
Loggerhead Sea Turtle Hatchlings, Sanibel Island & Captiva Island.
Loggerhead Sea Turtle Hatchlings, Sanibel Island & Captiva Island.

Sea Turtle Season Well Underway

|

CaptivaRentals.org. Avoid VRBO Fees. Rent Direct From Local Homeowners & Property Managers.Volunteering With The Sea Turtle Program!

Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation is looking for volunteers!

“Sea turtles are among the world’s oldest creatures. The seven species that can be found today have been on the earth for about 110 million years, since the time of the dinosaurs. These ancient reptiles have long fascinated people around the world and are some of our islands’ most treasured natural resources.

Sea turtle monitoring on Sanibel originally began in the late 1950’s with Charles Lebuff and Caretta Research, Inc., making it one of the longest running monitoring programs in the country. The program was transferred to the Sanibel Captiva Conservation Foundation in 1992 when Caretta Research, Inc. disbanded.

Every year in late spring, loggerhead sea turtles arrive on Sanibel and Captiva for the nesting season. The SCCF Sea Turtle Program surveys 18 miles of beach, from the Sanibel lighthouse to Blind Pass, every morning from April – October. Over 100 volunteers help with the daily search for tracks that the sea turtle left behind when she emerged from the sea the night before.

Loggerhead Sea Turtle, Ding Darling Saving Sea Turtles Exhibit

Loggerhead Sea Turtle, Ding Darling Saving Sea Turtles Exhibit

Sometimes sea turtles go back to the water without laying eggs, which is known as a non-nesting emergence. If we determine that the turtle successfully laid eggs, the nest is watched over until the eggs hatch and there are signs of the hatchlings crawling to the Gulf. Storms, humans, and predators may disturb or destroy the nests, reducing their survival.  After the nests hatch, they are evaluated to determine the number of hatchlings that successfully emerged.

In addition to nest protection activities, program staff also educate the public about the threats that sea turtles face, respond to live and dead sea turtles that wash up on the beach, participate in collaborative research projects, and help monitor beach construction projects. The Sea Turtle Program operates under a permit granted by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC).

Green Sea Turtle Recovering At CROW. Photo Courtesy OfClinic for the Rehabilitation of Wildlife.Please keep our beaches sea turtle friendly:

  • Turn off or shield all lights that are visible from the beach. Do not use flashlights or cell phone lights on the beach. If necessary, use amber or red LED bulbs
  • Do not disturb the screens covering nests. They prevent eggs from being eaten by predators and the hatchlings emerge through the holes without assistance
  • Remove all beach furniture and equipment from the beach at night
  • Dispose of fishing line properly to avoid wildlife entanglement
  • Fill in large holes that can trap hatchlings
  • Do not disturb nesting turtles – please do not to get too close, shine lights on, or take flash photos of nesting sea turtles
  • Pick up litter
Kemp's Ridley Sea Turtle By FWC Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, Sanibel Rentals.

Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle By FWC Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, Sanibel Rentals.

Our volunteer team is made up over 100 highly trained and experienced individuals, who are dedicated to the conservation effort of sea turtles.

A sea turtle volunteer it is required to survey the beach once per week from April 15-October. Volunteers start the surveys around 6:30 am and walk their assigned stretch of beach (approximately 1 mile) to look for tracks that the sea turtle left behind the previous night. You must be able to commit for the entire sea turtle season (April 15-October) and attend a training session in early April to become a volunteer.

We ask all interested parties to complete a survey on becoming a sea turtle volunteer with SCCF. The survey can be found here.”