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Marine turtle

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Marine lizard endemic to Galapagos islands. Herbivorous: graze on seaweeds ... Eggs- skunks, raccoons, pigs, lizards, crabs, ants, beetles, fungal and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marine turtle


1
Marine Reptiles
Saltwater crocodile
Marine iguana
Sea snake
Marine turtle
2
Sea Snakes
3
  • Diversity
  • Laticodtidae- krates- 5 species (1 is fw in
    Solomon Islands)
  • Hyrophidae- 54 different species
  • All derived from Colubrid ancestor colubrids
    evolved 40 mya Laticotids evolved from colubrids
    30 mya
  • Location
  • Laticotids- live from east coast India to Japan
    and come to the tip of Cape York (Australia)
  • Hydrophiids- found from south tip of Africa to
    India to South East Asian Islands to Japan to
    north half of Australia
  • Habitat
  • Primarily tropical coastal estuaries, coral
    reefs, open sea

4
  • Behavior
  • Often schooling in aggregations
  • Not aggressive but human fatalities have occurred
  • Prey Feed on small fish or squid, which are
    killed with powerful venom
  • Predators (few) sharks, snapper, grouper, crabs,
    saltwater crocodiles, raptors they descend to
    escape
  • Osmoregulation skin is impermeable to salts
    salts eliminated by sublingual gland

5
  • Reproduction
  • Krates are oviparous and lay eggs on land
  • Hydrophiids are viviparous and produce young in
    the water
  • Not much known about breeding
  • However, olive sea snake breed in spring
    seasonal courtship displays

6
Saltwater crocodiles
  • Largest living crocodilians 6-7 m long
  • Eggs laid and incubated on land
  • Tropical and subtropical

7
Marine Iguanas
  • Marine lizard endemic to Galapagos islands
  • Herbivorous graze on seaweeds
  • Salt-glands on nose to eliminate excess salt
  • Recently observed feeding on land for first time
  • They return to land to escape predators.

8
Marine Turtles (Honu)
9
History
Found in fossil record 200 mya (Triassic) Common
in Cretaceous (130 mya) Present day genera
originated 60 (Eocene) and 10 mya
(Pleistocene) Not a very diverse group Mostly
tropical and subtropical
10
Taxonomy
Class Reptilia
Order Chelonia- warm to temperate and boreal seas
ex. leatherback, ridley's, kemps   Order
Chelonia- F. Cheloniidae- green, flatback,
hawksbill, loggerhead F. Dermochelidae-
leatherback reduced shell, dermal bone scutes
compose shell F. Emydidae- diamond back
terrapin
Hawaii species- green, hawksbill, leatherback,
Olive Ridley
11
flatback
Class Reptilia Reptiles Order Chelonia
Turtles and Tortoises Family Chelonidae Marine
Turtles Scientific Name Natator depressus Diet
sea cucumbers, soft corals, jellyfish Size lt 1
m in length Conservation Status
vunerable Habitat near continental shelf,
shallow, soft bottom sea beds Range northern
part of Australia
12
Green turtle
Class Reptilia Reptiles Order Chelonia
Turtles and Tortoises Family Chelonidae Marine
Turtles Scientific Name Chelonia mydas Diet
seagrass and algae Size 500lbs Conservation
Status threatened Habitat high energy ocean
beaches, convergence zones in the pelagic
habitat, benthic feeding grounds in relatively
protected waters Range throughout world in all
tropical and subtropical oceans
13
hawksbill
Class Reptilia Reptiles Order Chelonia
Turtles and Tortoises Family Chelonidae Marine
Turtles Scientific Name Eretmochelys
imbricata Diet Shellfish Size 76 - 91 cm (30 -
36 in) Conservation Status Endangered Habitat
coral reefs, rocky coasts Range Tropical
Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans Caribbean
14
Loggerhead
Class Reptilia Reptiles Order Chelonia
Turtles and Tortoises Family Chelonidae Marine
Turtles Scientific Name Caretta caretta Diet
Crustaceans Size 76 - 102 cm (30 - 40 in)
Conservation StatusVulnerable Habitat coasts,
open sea Range Temperate and tropical areas of
the Pacific, Indian and Atlantic Oceans
15
leatherback
Class Reptilia Reptiles Order Chelonia
Turtles and Tortoises Family Dermochelidae
Marine Turtles Scientific Name Dermochelys
coriacea Diet sea jellies and salps Size 1500
lbs Conservation Status endangered Habitat
pelagic water Range tropical seas, oceanic
islands, Atlantic, Pacific, Indian Ocean
16
  • reduced shell,
  • dermal bone scutes
  • compose shell
  • 7 dorsal and 5
  • ventral dermal bones

17
Adaptation to the Marine Environment
Physiology
Poikilothermic (cold blooded) Skin has
scales Speed- 35 mph Breath holding- 2 hrs, when
sleeping or resting Maturity- 10-50 yrs for
green Cannot retract heads like terrestrial
turtles Lacrimal gland- salt secretion (drinks
seawater)
18
Anatomy
Has both internal and external skeleton- provided
protection and support for organs Fused
ribs Powerful sense of smell- find natal beach No
ears, but can perceive low frequency sound and
vibrations Male female- difference in tail
size males tail extends past rear flippers,
females is shorter
19
Reproduction
Mating- at sea Migration- occurs in late spring
female is accompanied by male Green sea turtles
migrate as far as 800 miles from feeding area to
nest in Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Egg laying
behavior- return to same beach (natal beach)
20
Kemps Ridley nesting
Usually nest at night Front flippers dig pit,
rear flippers carve out burrow
21
Egg tooth- used to chip away at shell Group
effort to get out of nest- emerge at night
(safer) and head towards brightest
light Artificial lights- confuse hatchlings
Turtle nest Cross section
22
Leatherback hatching
Kemps Ridley hatchlings
Clutch size- about 100 eggs covers pit with
sand Egg incubation- 2 months depending upon
species Sex determined by temperature- males
lower temp, females higher temp
23
Prey
24
Prey
Sea grass and Algae- adult green sea
turtle Epiphytes on sea grass, Sponges, fish,
crabs, conch- loggerheads (suction
feeders) Gelatinous zooplankton siphonophores j
ellyfish Crustaceans, mollusks, echinoderms-
Ridley
25
Predators
Eggs- skunks, raccoons, pigs, lizards, crabs,
ants, beetles, fungal and bacterial
infections Hatchlings- birds, mammals,
crabs Adults- sharks, humans
26
Factors Affecting Green Sea Turtle Population
Hawaii- 100-350 nesting females French Frigate
Shoals in the Northwest Hawaiian chain
  1. Hunters
  2. Fisheries
  3. Marine Debris
  4. Coastal Development and Habitat Degradation
  5. Fibropapilloma

27
Commercial Value
  • Meat
  • Eggs- nearly forbidden in all countries
  • with nesting beaches
  • Soup
  • Jewelry
  • Leather

Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES) turtle commerce prohibited in
countries that signed agreement
28
Protection and Management
Law enforcement- in Hawaii, turtles protected
under Endangered Species Act Riding or harassing-
100,000 fine prison time Bringing turtle
products into Hawaii- 20,000 prison
time Fishing regulations- Shrimp Trawlers -
incidental catch by commercial shrimp fish nets
drowned 10,000 turtles each year Drift nets, gill
nets Turtle Excluder Device (TED)
Increase sea turtle populations Ranching- eggs
or hatchlings from wild populations Farming-
originally from wild populations, for breeding
stock
29
Catch Statistics (1987) FAO yearbook on Fishery
Statistics 3100 metric tons Western Central
Atlantic- 1200 Eastern Central Pacific-
864 South East Pacific- 305 Western Central
Pacific- 258 North West Pacific- 190 Eastern
Central Atlantic- 153 Eastern Indian Ocean-
50 Western Indian Ocean-
37 Mediterranean - 20 South East
Atlantic- 10
30
Marine Debris- plastic bags, soda can plastic
rings, fishing line, oil and tar Costal
development and habitat degradation- noise,
light, beach obstructions- affect nesting habitat
31
Fibropapilloma- virus in Green turtles Affects
ability to feed, see, move about, or breath May
be due to pollutants, blood parasites, or habitat
change Kaneohe Bay (1991)- gt50 infected
32
Turtle Excluder Device
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