Sea turtle tracking reveals migration routes
A healthy turtle heading for the ocean wearing a satellite tag. Read or listen: Sea turtle strandings not a new phenomenon (NOAA)
After a winter of rehab, it’s back into the surf for this cold-stranded sea turtle. This time, though, satellites are watching where it’s going.
In the summer of 2006, 14 healthy sea turtles were released into the surf on Cape Cod. These turtles — from populations listed as endangered or threatened — had been rescued after strandings on New England beaches the previous fall.
They’d spent the winter in local aquariums. Connie Merigo is the marine animal rescue program coordinator at the New England Aquarium. She told Earth & Sky that five of the turtles were fitted with tags attached to their shells that let the turtles’ locations be tracked by satellite. Merigo wants to learn about turtle migration routes. She wants to know how well the aquarium’s rehabilitation methods are working.
Connie Merigo: Are these animals surviving, or are they going back out into the wild and within a month or a few months or weeks are they dying?
Merigo told us that the rehabbed turtles seemed to be doing well. Then, suddenly the tags stopped transmitting. Still, Merigo said she’s not too concerned.
Connie Merigo: Maybe the turtles are spending a lot more time underwater and when they come up, they’re only coming up and sticking their noses out and not clearing the whole tag. The entire tag has to actually clear the water so the saltwater switches will click on, and that’s what tells the tag to send a message to the satellite.
To track turtles online, come to earthsky.org. Our thanks today to NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Read or listen: Sea turtle strandings not a new phenomenon
To find out what you can do to help sea turtles:
Sea Turtle Restoration Project (You can track sea turtles online here as well.)
Sea turtle stranding and salvage network
To learn more about sea animal rescue:
New England Aquarium: animal rescue
Our thanks to:
Connie Merigo
Marine Animal Rescue Program Coordinator
New England Aquarium
Boston, MA
Additional Teacher Resources
NOAA: Marine Turtles
This NOAA web site provides information on marine turtle species, conservation and management, threats, recovery plans, and regulations.
NOAA: Loggerhead Sea Turtle Tracking
This web page about Grays Reef National Marine Sanctuary Satellite Tagging Project allows students to follow previously tagged loggerhead sea turtles using data provided on maps.