June 24, 2013 — For 220
million years they have roamed the seas, denizens of the bustling coral reef
and the vast open ocean. Each year, some emerge from the pounding surf onto
moonlit beaches to lay their eggs. Throughout human history, we have revered
them, used them, and worked to protect them, but we have only begun to
understand these ancient, iconic creatures. Now, with all five of the sea
turtle species in the U.S.
threatened or endangered, knowledge is more crucial than ever.
NOAA scientist Dr. Peter
Dutton leads a team that's trying to answer some important questions about
marine turtles. What will happen as sea levels rise, covering the nesting
beaches turtles have used for hundreds of years? Which turtle laid this
mysterious clutch of eggs on a remote beach? Where in the ocean do they mate,
and how big is this population?
Thanks to a recent
breakthrough in the genetics lab, Dutton and his colleagues have a clever way
to find answers. Like detectives, they have learned that fingerprints help
solve the puzzle…genetic fingerprints. For decades, most sea turtle studies and
conservation efforts have focused on nesting females and hatchlings, because
they're easiest for humans to access. Male sea turtles, which don't come
ashore, are elusive characters.
Dutton's team has
pioneered a technique that allows them to fill in the blanks using tiny DNA
samples from nesting females and hatchlings. As Dutton and his colleague Dr.
Kelly Stewart wrote in a recent article, "Hidden in a hatchling's DNA is
its entire family history, including who its mother is, who its father is, and
to what nesting population it belongs." (See: http://seaturtlestatus.org/sites/swot/files/report/030612_SWOT7_p12_Sea%20Turtle%20CSI.pdf)
This innovative tool is
opening up new avenues in marine turtle conservation. Population recovery goals
are based on how long turtles take to reach maturity, and genetic
fingerprinting can help reveal this key piece of information, which may be
different for each population. Dutton's team developed the technique while
studying endangered leatherbacks on St. Croix , U.S. Virgin Islands .
In the last four years, they have sampled 20,353 hatchlings there, and
discovered the genetic identity of the fathers, even when multiple males have
sired a single clutch of eggs; how often individual turtles mate and their
reproductive success; and the ratio of males to females among the breeding
turtles.
On Padre Island National
Seashore in Texas ,
critically endangered Kemp's ridley turtles have been leaving scattered nests
along remote beaches, but females are often long gone by the time monitors find
the nests. There, NOAA's Southwest
Fisheries Science
Center and the National
Park Service are using the technique to match mystery nests to mother turtles.
Identifying who's nesting where and when, survival rate, and breeding success
over many years will help us monitor this small population and gauge the impact
of major events like disasters.
In the most surprising
news yet, green turtles have begun nesting in the main Hawai'ian islands for
the first time in generations. Green turtles, or honu, have nested in the
remote Northwest Hawai'ian Islands, primarily on the quiet, low-lying beaches
of French Frigate Shoals, a coral atoll about 500 miles from Honolulu.
Genetic fingerprinting
shows that about 15 untagged females have become "founders" on the
main Hawai'ian islands, boldly nesting where no one has nested before…at least
not for hundreds of years. It's possible that this pioneer population could
provide a kind of buffer as sea level rise threatens to shrink their
traditional nesting beaches. Many questions remain, but for now science is
giving turtles, and those who care about them, reason to hope.
Story Source:
The above story is
reprinted from materials
provided by National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Need to cite this story in your essay, paper, or
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (2013,
June 24). Turtles have fingerprints?
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