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Sea turtles
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In the last two or so decades, tourism development and the associated infrastructure development has developed into a serious new threat ? in addition to overexploitation and fishing by catch - to the reproduction and survival of turtles. Six out of seven species of sea turtle are in danger of extinction. Often, sensitive ecosystems adjacent to important nesting beaches have already been destroyed in order to build hotels, airports, golf courses, etc. The impact of uncontrolled tourism and coastal development has been responsible for the total destruction of nesting beaches in several Mediterranean countries ? mainly Greece, Turkey and Cyprus.

 

The impacts of the increasing number of beachfront developments on nesting beaches are widespread and include:

  1. The physical removal of sand for building purposes may destroy nesting grounds.
  2. Ill located and/or built breakwaters (piers, jetties etc?) lead to changes in water flow and sediment transport which in turn cause coastal erosion, potentially threatening entire nesting beaches from disappearing.
  3. Trampling by people and vehicles compacts sand, leaving females incapable of digging their nests and preventing hatchlings from digging their way to the sand surface.
  4. Lights from hotels and streets can attract hatchlings, which have evolved to respond to moonlight reflecting off the ocean surf. The disoriented hatchlings may move inland where they can stray onto roads, be caught by predators, or dry out in the heat of the sun. Sodium lights are an easy and cheap alternative to this problem, by providing required lighting for tourists but affecting nesting females nor hatchlings to a lesser extent than regular lights.
  5. Hatchlings may come across deep car grooves, and, not being able to cross them follow them, often leading them away from the sea.
  6. The shading effect of beach umbrellas and sun loungers can also affect the ratio of male to female hatchlings - a nest temperature below 30oC will produce nothing but males!
  7. Boats at sea, near nesting beaches in the reproduction season might scare prospecting females away from the beach and may also cause injury and death.
  8. Umbrellas dug into sand can impale nests.
Being highly migratory, sea turtles are vulnerable to as many dangers in the seas as they are on beaches. Such threats include marine pollution and accidents by motorised boats. The ingestion of floating plastic objects by turtles, which often mistake plastic bags for jellyfish may result in the death of the animal.

 

Picture courtesy of NOAA.

Public awareness and education are possibly the most powerful tool in the conservation of sea turtles. Barbados is a small, densely populated developing country, heavily reliant on tourism for its economic security. The beaches for which Barbados is famous represent important recreational areas for Barbadians and tourists alike. There are no protected turtle nesting beaches in Barbados. During all activities of the Barbados Sea Turtle Conservation Project, the team will be interacting with other beach-users such as fisher folk and hotel staff, as well as tourists. Witnessing a sea turtle nesting or hatching and learning about the animal whilst it is in front of them on the beach is a learning experience more meaningful than any gained through the classroom or the media. In cases where wildlife resources are declining due to habitat destruction, poaching and other human threats, as is the case for sea turtles, this type of tourism if well managed, can result in long-term conservation.

 
 
 
 
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Dr. Ellen K. Rudolph
Photograph1159193268945_DrEllen_96dpi_.jpg
DescriptionI care deeply about our natural world. In my work as an international conservation photographer and educator I seek to impart to others a sense of the fragility of our world and the necessity for humans to protect our Earth from further destructive aspects of technology and unbridled growth. I am, in that regard, a fervent student of physicist David Bohm's wholeness and implicate order, which offers promising metaphors for reality as an interdependent whole. Western science interprets life as a series of separate problems with separate solutions. Newtonian mechanics is not some [partial] explanation of the way things work -- according to western science it is a [complete] explanation, so much so that all that is left for science is to now fill in a few remaining blanks. We are, in fact, so used to this idea by now that we forget how new a thought this is in human history. But this mechanistic thinking with its 'clockwork' metaphors may not only not be correct; it may distort our perceptions of reality. Ancient holistic ideas decry the cutting up of Nature into manageable, independent parts that can be understood individually and so do I. It has driven me towards an ever-increasing awareness of the need for a fundamental change in our collective perspective from the fragmentary essence of western scientific views to one that recognizes and celebrates the inherent interdependencies of living systems. - Dr. Ellen K. Rudolph
Keywords NATURE; TRAVEL; CONSERVATION; PHOTOGRAPHY; PHOTOJOURNALISM
Geography Keywords USA; COSTA RICA; ECUADOR; SURINAME; GUYANA; FRANCE; PROVENCE; SINGAPORE; SOUTH AFRICA; NAMIBIA; AUSTRALIAN CONTINENT
Organization Freelance
PositionPresident
Address
10900 Oakhurst Rd
Largo   Florida
USA   33774
Telephone+1 727 517 2767
Email
Homepagehttp://www.drellenrudolph.com
Related to TopicsMembers (members); Impacts of Tourism (2609); Sea turtles (19426); Birds (19538); Negative impacts; enclave tourism and other effects (19666); Positive effects (19670); Coral reefs (19356); Sand dunes and beaches (19338); Pollution and Waste (17936); Socio cultural aspects (19673); Issues in Recreation and Tourism (2314); Awareness Building (2623); Research (19702); Sustainable Tourism (2615); Types of Recreation and Tourism (2624); Ecotourism (2629); Ecosystem Vitality and Biodiversity (2572); Coastal Urbanisation (2520); Destruction of Habitats (2519); Awareness Building (2577); Threats to Habitats (2559)
  
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