INTERESTING FACTS
ABOUT SEA TURTLES
G'day folks,
I'm happy to write this because I love turtles.
Sea turtles are one of the Earth's most ancient
creatures. The seven species that can be found today have been around for
110 million years, since the time of the dinosaurs. The sea turtle's
shell, or "carapace" is streamlined for swimming through the water.
Unlike other turtles, sea turtles cannot retract their legs and head into their
shells. Their color varies between yellow, greenish and black depending on the
species.
Diet
What sea
turtles eat depends on the subspecies, but some common items include jellyfish,
seaweed, crabs, shrimp, sponges, snails, algae and mollusks.
Population
It is
difficult to find population numbers for sea turtles because male and juvenile
sea turtles do not return to shore once they hatch and reach the ocean, which
makes it hard to keep track of them.
Range
Sea
turtles are found in all warm and temperate waters throughout the world and
migrate hundreds of miles between nesting and feeding grounds. Most sea turtles
undergo long migrations, some as far as 1400 miles, between their feeding
grounds and the beaches where they nest.
FACT:
Green sea
turtles can stay under water for as long as five hours even though the length
of a feeding dive is usually five minutes or less. Their heart rate slows to
conserve oxygen: nine minutes may elapse between heartbeats.
Behaviour
Sea
turtles spend most of their lives in the water, where not much information can
be gathered on their behavior. Most of what is known about sea turtle behavior
is obtained by observing hatchlings and females that leave the water to lay
eggs. Sea turtles, like salmon, will return to the same nesting grounds at
which they were born. When females come to the shore they dig out a nest in the
ground with their back flippers, bury their clutch of eggs and return to the
ocean. After hatching, the young may take as long as a week to dig themselves
out of the nest. They emerge at night, move toward the ocean and remain there,
solitary, until it is time to mate.
Reproduction
Temperature:
Temperatures
of the sand where the turtles nest determine the sex of the turtle: below 85
degrees Fahrenheit (30ºC) is predominately male; above 85 degrees Fahrenheit
(30ºC) is predominately female.
Gestation: 6-10 weeks.
Clutch size: Between 70-190 eggs depending on the species.
When the young hatch out of their eggs, they make their way to the ocean. Few survive to adulthood.
Clancy's comment: Just love 'em'.
I'm ....
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