Nelson Mandela Metropolitan
University News, 7/6/17
Sea turtles in South Africa are
getting smaller – and scientists are trying to find out why, and how this will
affect future populations.
“What we are finding is that the
size at reproduction of individual loggerhead and leatherback turtles is
getting smaller over time, and we are gearing our research to find out what
could be the cause,” said NMMU’s Head of Zoology, Associate Professor Ronel
Nel, one of the world’s leading sea turtle researchers.
“This could also impact on the
population in the future … If they are small, the threat from predators [such
as sharks, dolphin fish, kingfish and ghost crabs and sea birds] is greater, as
they can’t swim as fast, so can’t escape,” said Nel, who has been conducting
sea turtle research for the past 14 years. She is the regional vice-chair of
the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Marine Turtle
Specialist Group, an advisory committee member for IOSEA (Indian Ocean and
South-East Asia region) Marine Turtles, and a member of the Western Indian
Ocean Marine Turtle Task Force.
Nel said the benchmark age for
loggerhead turtles to reach sexual maturity is 36 years. This is the age the
adult females return to the beaches where they were born, to lay their eggs,
after spending several decades living in an oceanic environment.
“Once a sea turtle reaches sexual
maturity, it doesn’t grow any more … What this means is that those turtles that
show a decline in size, will never catch up [to traditional size norms].”
Nel said scientists were trying
to work out why the females were getting smaller. “Some scientists think it’s
driven by the state of the oceans. There is not enough food around and so it is
advantageous for animals to breed at a younger age … Or because there is not
enough food around, they are not growing as big as they used to.”
She said changing sea
temperatures could also impact turtle growth, particularly loggerhead turtles
(which were much smaller than the 400kg to 500kg leatherback turtles). “If the
sea is too cold, their growth will slow down – as turtles are cold-blooded.”
South Africa’s sea turtles spend
a lot of their lives in the cold Benguela current on the west coast of the
country. “Their metabolism is dependent on their environment – they don’t
regulate their own body temperature. Turtles tend to lose energy during
the day, when their body temperature is lower, as they swallow lots of cold
water when feeding.”
Scientists are also trying to
determine the impact of smaller females on the reproduction output. “Do they
lay fewer eggs of the same size, or the same number, but much smaller eggs? Are
the hatchlings smaller? Smaller hatchling size could impact on their fitness
[as a species].”
Some of these questions are
already being answered, thanks to good baseline research in South Africa,
spanning the last 40 to 50 years.
“What we are finding is that
despite the change in the size of individuals, they are laying the same number
of eggs, but the eggs are getting smaller. The hatchlings are smaller – and the
adults will likely be smaller.
“Because South Africa has such a
good baseline of research, we can build a whole bunch of new research questions
… It is a good springboard for future work.”
Over the last breeding season
(2014/5), South Africa experienced its largest number of hatchling strandings
yet recorded – with sea pollution found to be the cause.
About 200 turtle hatchlings
washed up dead on South Africa’s beaches – and necropsies on the dead animals
revealed that most of them had ingested plastic.
“Scientists noticed a huge amount
of plastics in their gut, such as bottle lids, which punctured their intestines,
bladder and other organs,” said Nel.
She said turtles were unable to
regurgitate, so once they had ingested something, it had to work its way
through their systems.
“Hard plastics with sharp edges
are a problem. Smaller turtles are extremely vulnerable to this.”
Despite the deaths of the
hatchlings, sea turtle researchers in South Africa were celebrating the rise in
population numbers of the country’s loggerhead turtles.
“The loggerhead population has
been a conservation success of international proportion. Their numbers are
double the conservation target set 50 years ago.”
Their status has changed from
“endangered” to “near-threatened”.
However, leatherback turtles
remain a conservation concern. “In South Africa, their numbers have not
increased over time and they are still listed as critically-endangered, despite
other international successes.
“However, our research has
concluded that the problem is not on South African beaches or conservation
areas under our jurisdiction. Sea turtles on land in South Africa are as well
off as they could be.”
NMMU PhD student Linda Harris has
completed the world’s leading study of beach biodiversity, recording more than
500 species in the dune and surf zones of South Africa’s beaches, many of which
are found nowhere else in the world.
Nel, who supervised the student,
said some species – like the sea snail Bullia rhodostoma – was found only on
the Cape south coast. “It only occurs in that 30m wide stretch of sand along
the coast between Cape Town and Port Elizabeth, and nowhere else on earth.”
The student combined 40 years of
research, benchmarking the state of South Africa’s beaches and their
biodiversity, along the country’s entire coastline.
“We have managed to work out how
unique our beaches are, but also how some aspects are under-protected,” said
Nel.
She said the beach was often
“left vulnerable” between marine protected areas (which go up to the high water
mark) and terrestrial areas (which stop at the beach), leaving an unprotected
gap in the middle. “The beach is at the interface between these two systems.
They need protection from both sides.”
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