ABC News By
Bopha Phorn ,10/2/18
Go to https://abcnews.go.com/amp/US/dozens-endangered-baby-sea-turtles-hatched-york-city/story?id=58229791
for video of release
In a
miniature display of mass determination, 96 rare baby sea turtles hatched and
crawled to the ocean from their nest on a New York City beach this
week, according to the National Park Service.
The most
endangered and the smallest species of sea turtles, known as Kemp's ridley sea
turtles, crawled out to sea on the Rockaway Peninsula in Queens on Friday in
what experts said was an unprecedented phenomenon.
"This
is the furthest north [a Kemp's ridley sea turtle nest has ever been
documented], so it's very unusual that this turtle came to a beach in Queens,
New York to nest,” Patti Rafferty, chief of resource stewardship for Gateway
National Recreation Area, a 26,000-acre U.S. National Park Service area in New
York and New Jersey, told ABC News.
“This isn't
where she would usually come to nest, and then for the eggs to actually
successfully hatch. It's a pretty amazing thing,” she said.
Ninety-six
of the world's most endangered sea turtles hatched and crawled onto a beach on
New York's Rockaway Peninsula in September, 2018.
A female
Kemp’s ridley sea turtle crawled up the beach on the Rockaway Peninsula and
built a nest in mid-July, according to Rafferty.
National
Park Service (NPS) workers excavated the nest to save it from extreme high
tides. Staff were able to save and incubate 110 eggs. Of those, ninety-six have
hatched and crawled back to the sea.
Kemp's
ridley sea turtles are mainly found in the Gulf of Mexico, according to an NPS
statement.
“Juveniles,
probably carried by currents, can be found as far north as Nova Scotia along
the Atlantic Coast,” Rafferty said in the statement, noting that fishing and
human activities are the main causes for the decline in the population of this
species of sea turtles.
“It has a
very low population, and so a very low population relates back to harvesting
the turtle for food or harvesting the eggs for food,” Rafferty said.
The lights
associated with development are particularly problematic for female sea turtle
who come ashore to lay a nest. Female turtles will avoid well-lit beaches and
lights disorient hatchlings.
The Kemp’s
ridley sea turtle was listed in the United States as endangered in 1970.
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