
Seven species of sea turtles roam the world’s oceans but unfortunately, their populations are threatened by a number of human-related activities. Hotels and houses built near turtle nesting beaches have reduced their nesting grounds, and artificial lightings in this buildings disorient hatchlings.
As if that isn’t enough, adult turtles are captured for eggs, meat, leather and shell, seriously reducing their populations. Sea turtles also die from ingesting plastic bags, balloons and other garbage, drown in fishing nets, injured by long-line fishing hooks, etc. Many efforts are currently underway to conserve sea turtles and restore them to healthy populations, e.g. the Caribbean Conservation Corporation & Sea Turtle Survival League, the Sea Turtle Restoration Project and the National Save the Sea Turtle Foundation, to name a few.
But that doesn’t mean that you have to be a scientist or a conservationist to help save our turtles. In fact, there are many things that one can do to help save the turtles from going the way of dinosaurs.
Ingesting Plastic and other litter and debris–Thousands of sea turtles die each year from eating and becoming entangled in plastic bags and balloons floating in the water. While releasing helium balloons into the air is a common way to celebrate and event, the balloons end up drifting in the oceans where sea turtles mistake them for one of their main food sources, jellyfish.