U.S.
declares 'critical habitat' protection for loggerhead
turtles
Send a link to a friend
[July 10, 2014]
By Harriet McLeod
CHARLESTON S.C. (Reuters) -
The United States on Wednesday designated 685 miles
(1,100 km) of beaches from Mississippi to North Carolina
and 300,000 square miles (777,000 sq km) of ocean off
the Gulf and Atlantic coasts as critical nesting and
roaming habitat for threatened loggerhead sea turtles.
|
The joint ruling by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)
is the largest critical habitat designation in U.S. history,
environmentalists say.
The announcement followed a lawsuit filed last year by environmental
groups to require the government to protect the area. Scientists
said the area is home to 70,000 to 90,000 nesting sites per year and
comprises 84 percent of all known nesting areas for the large sea
turtles.
The designated area includes some reproductive areas directly off of
nesting beaches from North Carolina through Mississippi, and
breeding habitat in Florida, as well as 88 nesting beaches in six
states which account for 48 percent of an estimated 1,531 miles
(2,464 km) of coastal beach shoreline used by loggerheads.
"Given the vital role loggerhead sea turtles play in maintaining the
health of our oceans, rebuilding their populations is key as we work
to ensure healthy and resilient oceans for generations to come,"
said Eileen Sobeck, assistant NOAA administrator for fisheries.
Protection doesn't limit public access to the designated areas but
requires that any federal activity in the waters off nesting sites,
such as drilling or fisheries, must be further scrutinized for
possible impact on the turtles.
The loggerhead is the most common sea turtle in the southeastern
United States and migrate thousands of miles in U.S. waters but nest
on Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico shores.
[to top of second column] |
They can live 40 years or longer, weighing up to 250 pounds (113
kg), and were first listed as endangered in 1978.Loggerheads face
persistent threats from fishing gear, pollution and climate change,
said Amanda Keledjian, a marine scientist at Oceana, a
Washington-based nonprofit environmental group, one of three
organizations that sued the government.
Scientists estimate about 50,000 loggerhead sea turtles are caught
in shrimp trawls each year in the Gulf of Mexico, she said.
Endangered or threatened sea turtles that frequent Atlantic or Gulf
of Mexico waters also include Kemp's ridley, leatherback and green
sea turtles.
(Editing by David Adams and Sandra Maler)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright
2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|