Mélange Travel & Lifestyle Magazine January 2017 | Page 70

Protected the Sea Turtles of Barbados by Shana Jones

Precious and

Protected the Sea Turtles of Barbados by Shana Jones

One evening as I was nearing the end of my jog on the boardwalk on Barbados’ south coast, I noticed a crowd gathering and peering intently at something in the sand just up ahead. Small pockets of people dotted a rough line crossing my path from one side of the boardwalk to the other, cresting a small sand hill and continuing towards the sea. My mildly aroused curiosity was tempered by an urgency to get to my car because the looming greyness overhead had started to shower lightly.

Upon reaching the crowd, the reason for the fuss was revealed: some baby sea turtles had just emerged from a nearby nest and the hatchlings were making their way to the sea! So many thoughts came to mind as I viewed the tiny black specks scampering frantically towards the water: awe at new life, wonderment at the long journey ahead, and shock at their vulnerability, to name a few. The rain now a distant memory, I shuffled to get a good viewing point while some trained their cameras and others( volunteers, I would soon discover) re-directed some disoriented hatchlings back on track to the water. We all stood captivated, forming a cheering section of sorts, and waited until the last of the stragglers touched water and was swept away by a gentle wave. predation by stray dogs is a real threat. After the 55- 75-day incubation period, the hatchlings dig their way out of the nest over a 2-4-day period and then follow the light of the ¨brightest horizon¨ towards the sea. When that ¨brightest horizon¨ is caused by car lights or the flash of photography, they become disoriented and risk being run over by vehicles or eaten by crabs or stray animals. It is this same sensitivity to light that may scare a nesting turtle back to the sea, causing her to abandon the nesting process. The 1 sea turtle in 1000 that survives the 25-30 years into adulthood may get caught in fishing nets and accidentally be drowned.
I later found out that sea turtles are a critically endangered species( approaching a ¨very high risk of extinction¨, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature), and so episodes such as this one I witnessed are very important to increasing the turtle population. The odds of survival for sea turtles are daunting: from the time a mother turtle digs her nest in the sand( about 50 cm in depth) and deposits her eggs,
Shana shares other travel stories on her Blog, The Roaming Aviatrix- www. roamingaviatrix. com
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