November
10, 2019
WELLFLEET
MA– by Brian Merchant (in the NYC/Long Island area it will be below
freezing from November 12-14. Start walking those beaches.)
The first
cold-stunned sea turtles of the season were found washed ashore Saturday on
bayside beaches.
Volunteers
with Mass Audubon’s Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary discovered a dead green
sea turtle in at Eastham’s South Sunken Meadow Beach and a live Kemp’s ridley
at Breakwater Beach in Brewster.
Kemp’s
ridley sea turtles are the most endangered sea turtle species in the world.
The live
turtle will receive medical care and be rehabilitated at the New England
Aquarium’s Animal Care Facility in Quincy.
The
turtles, which feed in local waters during the summer, get caught by the
region’s geography as they try to migrate south and experience hypothermia like
conditions as the waters get colder. The body temperatures of the turtles fall
with the water temperature and their systems begin to shut down.
Although
much of the bay remains above 50 degrees, the temperature at which turtles
generally become cold-stunned, there are shallow areas that can be
significantly colder.
Karen
Dourdeville, the sea turtles stranding coordinator for Wellfleet Bay Wildlife
Sanctuary, says the strandings were the result of Friday’s gusty northwest
winds.
“We
encourage everyone who visits a bayside beach to keep their eyes open for
stranded turtles, even out on the tidal flats,” Dourdeville said.
More
turtles are expected to wash ashore in the middle of the week as strong winds
are being forecast.
Beach
walkers who find a turtle are asked to bring it well above the high tide line
and to cover it completely with dry seaweed for protection.
The
turtles location should be marked with beach debris and reported to the
Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary at 508-349-2615.
More than
800 turtles washed ashore cold-stunned last year on Cape Cod beaches. The
number of turtle strandings have been rising since the late 1970s.
A record
number of more than 1,200 turtles were found cold-stunned in 2014.
The
reason for more turtles stranding aren’t clear to researchers, but warmer
waters in the Gulf of Maine and increased nesting productivity for some of the
species may be contributing factors.
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