Subject: Oil-spill Response Plan to protect sea turtle nests and hatchlings
released 
 

DATE: June 26, 2010 17:34:00 CST 

Oil-spill Response Plan to protect sea turtle nests and hatchlings released
Key contact numbers

·         Report oiled shoreline or request volunteer information: (866)
448-5816

·         Submit alternative response technology, services or products:
(281) 366-5511 

·         Submit your vessel for the Vessel of Opportunity Program: (866)
279-7983 or (877) 847-7470

·         Submit a claim for damages: (800) 440-0858

·         Report oiled wildlife: (866) 557-1401
 Deepwater Horizon Incident
Joint Information Center

Phone: (713) 323-1670
(713) 323-1671
 

 

Unified Command Wildlife Branch scientists and partner organizations are
implementing an extraordinary plan to protect sea turtle nests and eggs from
potential impacts of the Deepwater Horizon/BP oil spill in the northern Gulf
of Mexico.

The plan, entitled Sea Turtle Late-Term Nest Collection and Hatchling
Release Plan, was developed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS),
National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA-Fisheries), and the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWCC), and involves translocation of an
anticipated 700 nests in an effort to prevent the loss of the entire cohort
of hatchlings.

The plan takes a proactive approach to minimize oil-spill impacts by
ensuring nests are marked to prevent damage from beach clean-up operations,
and by coordinating the collection of nests at a point in the incubation
cycle where transport is less likely to result in the loss of viable eggs.

“Permitted nest surveyors have been in the field locating and marking nests
daily since the start of the nesting season,” said Sandy MacPherson, FWS
national sea turtle coordinator. “Data on the nest location and the date
deposited are being closely tracked.  This allows us certainty in timing the
nest collection phase of the plan.”

Once collected, the nests are individually packed in specially prepared
Styrofoam boxes and transported by specially equipped ground transportation
to a secure, climate-controlled location on the east central coast of
Florida where they will remain until incubation is complete.

MacPherson noted that most nests are laid by loggerheads; however, a few
nests are also possible from three other sea turtle species – Kemp’s ridley,
leatherback, and green turtle.

“As hatchlings emerge they will be released on east central Florida beaches
where they will be allowed to make their way to the ocean,” said Barbara
Schroeder, NOAA Fisheries national sea turtle coordinator.

“In developing this plan we realized early on that our expectations for
success needed to be realistic,” MacPherson said. “On the one hand the
activities identified in the protocols are extraordinary and would never be
supportable under normal conditions.  However, taking no action would likely
result in the loss of all of this year’s Northern Gulf of Mexico hatchlings.

This plan applies to nests deposited on Florida Panhandle and Alabama
beaches during the 2010 nesting season only as it is this year’s cohort in
the Northern Gulf area which is at the highest risk for encountering oil
after entering the ocean.

Officials do not intend to implement these protocols elsewhere or in future
years in this area.

According to Robbin Trindell with the FWCC’s Imperiled Species Management
Branch, oil-spill impacts to nests laid along the Southwest Florida beaches
are not likely to result in the loss of the entire 2010 hatchling cohort.

“The loggerhead turtles produced on Southwest Florida beaches are part of a
larger subpopulation that also nests on Florida’s Atlantic Coast beaches,”
Trindell explained.  “Thus, the likelihood that all or a significant portion
of this 2010 cohort would be lost is highly improbable.”

Officials note that scientists continue to monitor the oil-spill situation
and are prepared to consider additional options if and when needed.

The complete plan, along with other wildlife related plans and recommended
protocols, is available on-line at the FWS North Florida Ecological Services
Office website -  http://www.fws.gov/northflorida.

If you observe or find a sea turtle that appears oiled or injured, please
immediately call 1-866-557-1401.  Individuals are urged not to attempt to
help injured or oiled sea turtles, but to report the sightings to the
toll-free number.  If you are interested in volunteering to aid in the
recovery effort, call 1-866-448-5816.  Four Gulf-coast states have also
setup websites for volunteers; those are available at our website at
http://www.fws.gov/home/dhoilspill/whatyou.html.

 

For information about the response effort, visit
www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com.

 

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