During World Water Day on March 22, it’s worth highlighting ways to explore the Indian River Lagoon and a new photo project ...
While it’s good news that the turtles have already been adapting in this way, it’s bad news that they must. Researchers ...
Protect/save the sea turtles!” is a common rallying cry for environmentalists, marine biologists, oceanographers, and others ...
is your Calallen and Northwest Corpus Christi Neighborhood Reporter. A yearly tradition has made its way back to North Padre Island as 46 sea turtles were released back into the ocean. Hundreds of ...
Image by See page for author, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons The deterioration in sea turtle numbers can be attributed to several key threats. These include habitat destruction, climate change, ...
(March 9, 2025) Loggerhead sea turtles that were rehabilitated at the New England Aquarium and released back into the ocean in 2021 and 2022 are still alive and showing a surprising affinity for New ...
Every year, hundreds of loggerheads, Kemp’s ridleys, greens, and other sea turtle species wash ashore on Massachusetts beaches, mostly along the coast of Cape Cod Bay. Stranding season peaks in ...
The former child star ignited controversy after she uploaded a since-deleted video of herself touching green sea turtles on the shore of Pa’ia Town in Maui. In the lighthearted Instagram caption ...
1 in 1,000 turtle hatchlings are expected to survive after they're born. Sea turtles lay about 80 to 120 eggs. There are five Florida sea turtle species: Hawksbill, Kemp's ridley, Loggerhead ...
Despite these impressive numbers, only a fraction of baby sea turtles survive to adulthood. From the moment they hatch, they face numerous threats—including predators, obstacles, and light pollution, ...
Turtle populations continued to face threats from causes such as coastal development, pollution and climate change. In India, sea turtle foraging and breeding sites overlap with important fishing ...
Heavy metal contamination and plastic pollution already threaten sea turtles, while rising sea levels due to climate change will introduce new risks to reproduction by flooding nesting sites.