BY HANNAH
MORSE, Brandenton Herald, 9/14/17
A marked
turtle nest is seen Wednesday after Hurricane Irma. Marc R. Masferrer mmasferrer@bradenton.com
Hurricane
Irma may have gutted some sea turtle nests on local beaches and flung baby
squirrels out of their nests, but it’s not said to be the worst wildlife damage
seen.
Anna
Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring executive director Suzi Fox
said volunteers estimated about 25 nests were lost.
“We have
gone through no-name storms during nesting season that have taken much more
than this one did,” Fox said.
There
have been 488 nests recorded on the island as of Sept. 8, meaning more than
24,000 hatchlings have crawled their way to the Gulf of Mexico. This number
already surpasses records calculated for all of last year by 53 nests and
nearly 6,000 baby turtles.
High
winds from the storm plucked some of the wooden stakes that marked where the
nests lay, but Fox said the eggs could still be in the ground.
“Even
though there are stakes down, we have recovered some of those nests by
following GPS and restaking,” she said.
The black
skimmers nesting on Holmes Beach had moved a couple of blocks north, Fox said,
but she’s concerned about the 40 juveniles who can’t fly.
“We need
to be very careful of the rack line,” she explained, noting the collection of
seaweed pushed by the high surf toward shore. The birds like to rest and forage
in the rack lines, and could be stepped on.
On Mote
Marine Laboratory’s turtle turf from Longboat Key to Venice, officials started
on Wednesday to assess the nests. Hayley Rutger, Mote’s content development
manager, said it may take a week or more to figure out which nests were spared
any damage, which had hatched, which were washed over but potentially viable
and which were completely lost.
From the
last update from Mote from earlier this month, this turtle season so far
brought 4,421 loggerhead turtle nests and 80 green sea turtle nests along the
35-mile patrol area.
If nests
are being coated with waves, it’s OK, Rutger said.
“(The
nest is) designed to drain, so we tell (people) to leave it alone,” she said.
But
Mote’s sea turtle program can be contacted at 941-388-4331 if anyone sees eggs
exposed to the air or hatchlings headed in the opposite direction of the water
on any beaches from Longboat Key to Venice. Rutger said any hatchling that is
walking away from the ocean can be put into a bucket with a layer of sand — not
in water or air conditioning — and a thin towel over the bucket as Mote is
called.
While
Wildlife Inc. Education and Rehabilitation Center is relying on three
generators to power their Bradenton Beach headquarters, they haven’t stopped their
operations.
Since
Irma passed over earlier in the week, the nonprofit has collected about 40 baby
squirrels, with more expected. The latter half of hurricane season usually
coincides with squirrel season, said the nonprofit’s president Ed Straight.
“We’re
getting calls all the time about baby squirrels,” Straight said.
A great
blue heron, raccoon, screech owl, pelican and a duck, among other creatures,
are also recovering after the storm. “Most
things just got hit by something blowing,” he said.
Even
though they’re waiting on the lights to return, there is one upside.
“The good
news is we have it so warm, we don’t have to worry about the incubators,”
Straight laughed.
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