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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
Sea Turtles
BY: Leah, Loveleen, Hugo, & Cyrus
Photo by
Nemo's great uncle
2.
FACTS ABOUT SEA TURTLES
Earths most ancient creatures
245 million years (since the time of the dinosaurs)
sea turtles cannot retract their legs and head into their shells
they are marine reptiles
7 species
Photo by
bmward_2000
3.
Sea Turtle Evolution
land based then evolved to water
lay eggs on land
not all species were so lucky
they have come so far only to be endangered by human destruction
Photo by
HockeyholicAZ
4.
Hundred and fifty, and still young, dude. Rock on.
-Crush from Finding Nemo
5.
7 species of Sea Turtles
leatherback sea turtle
loggerhead sea turtle
Kemp's ridley sea turtle
hawksbill sea turtle
flatback sea turtle
olive ridley sea turtle
green sea turtle
Photo by
IronHide
6.
GREEN SEA TURTLE
Photo by
little79bear
7.
Reproduction
Adult males can breed every year
Females can breed every 3-4 years
Green Sea Turtles mating process isn’t well known due to the fact the mating occurs in the sea
Photo by
TurtleDude
8.
Reproduction
Female Green Sea Turtle’s prefer to lay their eggs on their own nesting beach.
Females arrive at a beach to dig a hole and lay 75-200 eggs
then covered with sand and hatchlings are left to fend for themselves
Photo by
USFWS/Southeast
9.
Journey back to Sea
A great threat to hatchlings is light pollution near beach nesting sites.
Light from homes & buildings confuse the hatchlings.
Photo by
President Mahinda Rajapaksa
10.
Adult Life
Once hatchlings make it to the sea. It will be at least 10-25 years before they themselves can breed.
Photo by
prilfish
11.
Habitat
Green turtles primarily use three types of habitat:
beaches for nesting
open ocean convergence zones
coastal areas for "benthic" feeding
Photo by
A Guy Taking Pictures
12.
Climate
they’re reptiles; ectothermic
they mainly go for warmer waters: equatorial and around the tropics
Photo by
zbigphotography (1M+ views)
13.
Diet
In youth: omnivores; they eat everything (crustaceans, various worms, and seagrass)
Even eat Jellyfish
Adults: herbivores
primarily eat seagrasses and algae
Photo by
Chambo25
14.
Predators
as hatchlings, they are horribly vulnerable
predators include various seabirds, crabs, and small mammals
only about 1 in 10 make it to the ocean
outside of humans and sharks, they have no natural predators
Photo by
St.VincentVolunteers
15.
*pause*
So we can appreciate this adorable sea turtle
16.
How could you harm something this adorable?
HUMANS are their greatest threat...
17.
Threats
Harvest for Consumption
Illegal Shell Trade
Fisheries
Marine Debris
Artificial Lighting
Beach Erosion/Activites
Marine Pollution/Oil Spills
Climate Change
18.
Endangered
They are slaughtered for their eggs, meat, and shells
Fisheries capture fish/marine organisms by the thousands
Plastic bags look like jelly fish in the water, common for them to ingest plastic mistakenly; blocks intestines
19.
Question?
How can we help these adorable creatures?
20.
YOU can help them TODAY
21.
How to Help
Reduce the Amount of Plastic Garbage You Produce
Tell People How Helium Balloons Harm Sea Turtles
Reduce the Amount of Chemicals You Use
Photo by
jimmyweee
22.
Review Questions?
How many species of Sea Turtles are there?
Where do the females lay their hatchlings?
What is the most dangerous part of a sea turtles life?
Photo by
NothingToDeclare
23.
Thanks for Listening
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