SEA TURTLE POPULATION IN FLORIDA DROPPED 39.5% SINCE 1998
Remember the turtles that seemed to "fly" underwater in the animation "Saving Nemo"? Those were loggerhead turtles.
They've lived on the planet for millions of years (nod and wink to you
creationists out there), but now they appear to be headed the way of the dinosaur. The largest remaining loggerhead sea turtle rookery in the United States is in steep decline, according to the latest Index Nesting Beach Survey compiled by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. The analysis shows that nest counts have slumped 22.3 percent from 1989 to 2005, with a 39.5 percent decline since 1998.
The threats to these wonderful creatures are us: Coastal development, pollution, lighted beaches, loss of nesting habitat, drowning in shrimp nets and other fishing gear, predation of nests. The greatest threat is loss of nesting habitat due to coastal development, predation of nests. Shrimping is thought to have played a significant role in the recent population declines observed for the loggerhead.
Although loggerhead sea turtles nest at many locations around the world, the Commission says nearly 90 percent of the world’s population nests on the beaches of Florida and the beach at Masirah in Oman on the Arabian Peninsula. Loggerhead turtles have been federally listed as threatened since 1978.