by Erin Van Rheenen, Hakai Magazine, 10/11/18
Leatherback
turtles—nearly two meters long and weighing up to 500 kilograms—are
built to move. They are the only sea turtle to have tough, ridged,
rubbery skin instead of a hard shell, and their streamlined shape and
powerful front flippers enable them to swim thousands of kilometers
through the open ocean during their migrations.
In
their multi-year journeys, leatherback turtles face a variety of lethal
threats, from ingesting plastic debris to being caught as by-catch by
commercial fishers. Yet the protections leatherback turtles get during
various stages of their journeys can vary wildly. According to a new study,
leatherback turtles will frequently cross through the waters of as many
as 30 different countries, each with its own set of laws and
enforcement capabilities.
Leatherback
turtles are not the only species to face such shifting protections. In
the new paper, Autumn-Lynn Harrison, an ecologist at the Smithsonian
Conservation Biology Institute, and her colleagues used tracking data to
analyze the movements of 1,648 individual animals from 14 species—from
white sharks to sooty shearwaters to leatherbacks. They found that,
cumulatively, these animals visit 86 percent of Pacific Ocean countries
during their migrations.
The study used data from the Tagging of Pelagic Predators
(TOPP) program, which began tracking the movements of predators
throughout the Pacific Ocean in 2000. To date, more than 200 scientific
studies have been based on this data set.
Bryan
Wallace, a marine conservationist at Conservation Science Partners and
an expert in global leatherback population dynamics who was not a part
of this recent study, lauds the fact that extensive, hard-won data sets
like TOPP continue to be put to use to try to answer “tangible
questions.” He says Harrison’s study “provides a strong scientific
foundation for the more challenging geopolitical and resource management
discussions.”
The
international travel of leatherbacks and other marine species makes
conservation efforts challenging, Harrison says. Coastal nations pass
laws to exploit or protect marine life, but these regulations only
extend up to 370 kilometers from each country’s shoreline in what is
called its exclusive economic zone (EEZ). Outside of EEZs lie the high
seas, a global commons that is one of the least protected areas on
Earth—and one in which the studied species spend the majority of their
time.
Wallace
points out that in the high seas, technologies designed to reduce
by-catch, such as circle hooks, are not required, though some fleets and
boats do use them. In contrast, other areas have stringent
regulations—such as near the leatherback turtle nesting beaches in Las
Baulas National Marine Park, on the northwest coast of Costa Rica, where
fishing of any sort is prohibited.
Harrison
presented her research at the recent United Nations meeting in New
York, where diplomats were negotiating the world’s first legally binding
treaty for the high seas. She says she left the meeting feeling
optimistic.
“There
wasn’t complete consensus on whether there needs to be global
oversight, but I did feel a pretty overwhelming sense that, globally,
nations know that something needs to change in the high seas.”
Harrison
hopes her research will provide critical information for designing
international agreements to protect at-risk species as they travel
through multiple jurisdictions and across the open ocean.
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