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Sea Turtles Need Your Help!
Centuries ago, sea turtles
roamed our oceans by the millions. In the last 100 years their numbers been
greatly reduced. All seven species of sea turtles are in danger of
extinction. Demand for sea turtle meat, eggs, and other by-products, as well
as a loss of habitat, commercial fishing, and pollution have contributed to
their decline.
The main danger for hatchelings is from artificial lighting. When the
babies emerge, they instinctively move in the brightest direction. Normally,
this would be the open night sky reflected by the ocean. On a developed
beach, artificial lights attract the hatchelings, causing them to crawl in
the wrong direction. Other dangers include obstructions on the beach, such
as beach chairs, holes, or tire tracks, all of which can block their path to
the sea.
If you are visiting, or live near the beach, you can help by keeping outside
lights off during turtle season from May through October. Make sure to
remove chairs, umbrellas and other gear from the beach each night. Level all
sand castles and fill any holes dug during play. Please pick up all trash.
Sea turtles mistakenly eat debris, especially plastic, which results in
death. Never buy products made from sea turtles or any other endangered
species
If you own , rent or use property near the Gulf, please pay special
attention to this newsletter. It includes suggestions for low-cost ways
to help the sea turtles, which are protected by the Endangered Species
Act.
Thank you
Santa Rosa Island Authority
Information for this report was compiled from the Santa Rosa Island
Authority and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection,
"Understanding, Assessing, and Resolving Light-Pollution Problems on Sea
Turtle Nesting Beaches."
These Steps Will Make Sea Turtles Safer
Residents can help make the area safer for sea
turtles during their nesting and hatching season, which begins May 1 and
concludes October 31. Less light means a better chance of survival for
the sea turtles, which are protected by the Endangered Species Act.
Here's what you can do: For residential properties
• Remove unneeded fixtures or lights.
• Use low-pressure sodium vapor lights.
• Place outdoor lights on motion sensors so they don't burn
needlessly.
• Attach shields to block beachside lights.
• Place security lights on motion sensors.
• Tint windows; close curtains after dark.
• Use directional fixtures which can be aimed down and away from the
beach.
• Move fixtures to block them from beach view.
• Use yellow “bug” lights of 50 watts or less; they're less likely to
attract sea turtles.
• Reduce height of fixtures.
• Place lights below dune line or shield with vegetation.
• Do not use spotlights on the beach.
How Beach Lighting Makes Sea Turtles Vulnerable
Lights, even from distant homes, can lead to
the deaths of sea turtles and their
hatchlings.
Light on the beach disorients the turtles and their hatchlings, luring
them away from the water and leaving them vulnerable to other animals,
exhaustion, passing automobiles and the morning sun.
Sea turtles nest in the dunes of Santa Rosa Island from May through
August; the babies hatch from mid-July to the end of October.
At hatching time, up to 150 hatchlings burst from the nest and dash to
the relative safety of the Gulf of Mexico. Moving quickly from the nest
to the sea is vital to their survival.
But lights attract -- and endanger -- sea turtles. They are drawn away
from the water by street lights, porch and deck lights, even lights
visible through windows of buildings
hundreds of feet away. This distraction can get them lost; a single
light near a nesting beach can misdirect hundreds of turtles and lead to
their death.
Lights and weather are major enemies of sea turtles. For example, 13
nests were found on Pensacola Beach last year. Twelve were loggerhead
turtle nests and one was a nest for green turtles.
Four nests were lost to Hurricane Earl, which rumbled erratically
through the Gulf of Mexico in early July before coming ashore near
Panama City.
Hatchlings at all of the remaining nests were disoriented and began
crawling toward lights in the area. National Park Service staffers were
present to reorient most of the hatchlings, but two of the nests hatched
when Park Service personnel were not present. Some of these hatchlings
were rescued but most died.
Lights at Beach Park Being Repositioned to Minimize Distraction to
Turtle Hatchlings
Gulf Power crews will soon redirect the lights
at the recreation park at the gate to
Fort Pickens to help encourage survival of sea turtles, which are
protected by the Endangered Species Act.
Three tall light poles will be moved slightly and their lamps will be
redirected so they shine toward the north, away from the Gulf of Mexico.
This should reduce distractions for sea turtles nesting nearby and
encourage the hatchlings to travel directly to the gulf.
This was just one of several trouble spots found during a recent survey
of Pensacola Beach's gulf front to determine areas of excessive lighting
that can hurt sea turtles. The survey was conducted by a team of
representatives from the Santa Rosa Island Authority, Gulf Power, the
National Park Service, the Pensacola Beach Residents & Leaseholders
Association, and the Pensa cola
Beach Chamber of Commerce.
The survey showed the extensive impact of lights, with many seen from
the beach even though they were in homes not directly on the gulf. Beach
areas were illuminated by lights from as far away as the north side of
Fort Pickens Road and Ariola Drive.
Island Authority staffers will contact leaseholders who had the highest
concentration of lights and discuss ways to reduce light shining on the
beach.
The Island Authority encourages citizen cooperation. If you see sea
turtles on the beach, please call the National Park Service, 916-3010.
If you have questions about your lights and their possible impact on sea
turtles, please call Debbie Norton, Island Authority, 932-2257. We will
be glad to work with you.
Choose Lights That Won't Hurt Sea Turtles, Hatchlings
  
Low-pressure sodium-vapor (LPS) lighting emits
a pure-yellow light that seems to affect nesting turtles less than light
from other sources, at least for loggerheads and green turtles, the most
common turtles on Santa Rosa Island.
LPS lighting has both advantages and disadvantages:
Expense:
LPS initially costs substantially more than incandescent or fluorescent
lights because it uses more expensive bulbs and ballasts . But operating
costs are generally much lower for LPS than for any other commercial
source.
Color
-- LPS sources are monochromatic and therefore give poor color
rendition. But full-spectrum color is seldom needed for safety and
security. For example, U.S. Air Force bases near nesting beaches in
Florida use LPS lights for most outside security areas.
Disposal -- The
lamps within LPS luminaries contain elemental sodium, which can cause
fires if disposed of carelessly. However, unlike some other lamps, the
contents of LPS lamps are not toxic.
Availability --
LPS luminaries are not as readily available in retail stores as other
light sources, but manufacturers offer a wide selection.
When using other conventional lighting systems, adjust the fixtures to
keep the light from being visible from the nesting beach.
Completely shielding fixtures with a sheet of metal flashing can reduce
stray light reaching the beach. Louvered step lighting is one of the
best ways to light balconies that are visible from nesting beaches.
For parking areas near nesting beaches, low-mounted, louvered bollard
fixtures are preferred, but fully hooded floodlights also can direct
light accurately and reduce stray light.
Q&A: Answers to Frequent Questions About Sea Turtles
When do hatchling sea turtles emerge from
their nests?
In the Southeast, hatchlings emerge in June,
July, August, September and October.
It is a myth that hatchlings emerge only around the time of a full moon.
Hatchlings ready to emerge wait just beneath the sand surface until
conditions become cool. This temperature cue prompts them to emerge
primarily at night, although some have emerged in late afternoon or
early morning.
When they emerge from their nests, how do
hatchling sea turtles know where the Gulf is?
They have an inborn tendency to move in the
brightest direction. On a beach, the brightest direction is most often
the open view of the night sky over, and reflected by, the gulf.
Hatchlings also tend to move away from darkly silhouetted objects such
as dunes and vegetation.
My neighbors' lights are visible from the
beach. Why should I modify the lights on my beachfront property?
Sea turtles benefit from any reduction of
artificial lighting on the nesting beach. As lighting is reduced,
hatchlings will have a better chance of reaching the sea.
How bright can a light be without affecting hatchlings or sea turtles
on the beach?
Unfortunately, no simple measure of light
intensity can reveal whether a light source is a problem. . . Any light
that is visible from the beach is likely to cause problems.
Will
placing bright lights on platforms offshore guide hatchlings into the
water off lighted beaches?
Apart from being overly expensive and
complicated, lighting the gulf to draw hatchlings offshore probably
would create more problems, such as interfering with hatchling dispersal
and making the babies more vulnerable to predatory fish.
How expensive is a beach-darkening program?
The simplest solution -- turning off lights
visible from the beach during the nesting season -- costs little or
nothing and may actually save electricity costs.
Most of the essential lighting that remains can be easily shielded so
that the light performs its intended function without reaching the
beach. Proper shields can be made from inexpensive metal flashing and
fastened with screws.
Replacing fixtures is more expensive but is necessary only when an owner
is concerned about lighting efficiency or aesthetics. Choosing
well-designed fixtures and incorporating light-management techniques
into the plans for coastal development are the most effective ways to
fulfill lighting needs while protecting sea turtles.
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Sea Turtle
Trivia
 | Florida beaches are home to 80% of Loggerhead turtles
in the U.S.
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 | Turtles can migrate thousands of miles, but
usually return to lay their eggs on the same beach where they hatched
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 | Sea turtles have existed for over one hundred
million years
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 | It can take 15 - 50 years before a sea turtle
is capable of reproducing
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 | Scientists estimate that only 1 in 1000 to
10,000 babies will survive to adulthood
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 | Sea turtles live their entire life in the
ocean. The only time they comes ashore is when the female lays her
eggs.
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 | Sea turtles are reptiles. They breathe air,
and can hold their breath for long periods of time.
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 | When its time to sleep, a loggerhead will
wedge under a rock close to the shore, or take a snooze while floating
on the surface of deep water
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 | Hatchelings weigh less than one ounce and are
only two inches long. Adults can grow over 3 feet long and weigh 200
to 300 pounds!
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 | The nest temperature during incubation
determines a sea turtle's sex. Boys like it cool - Girls like it hot.
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 | Sea turtles have great underwater vision, but
are nearsighted out of the water.
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 | Although sea turtles do not have external
ears, they are capable of hearing low frequency sounds and vibrations
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 | Sea turtles use their strong jaws to crush a
diet of crabs, shrimp, mussels, and jelly fish |
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