Logo

Turtle News | The Lastest Scute

Turtle Nests on the Beach

posted: June 18, 2020, 4:40 PM

Every morning starting in early May a volunteer rides an ATV down the length of Holden Beach looking for momma turtle tracks. These tracks (called a crawl) show that a momma turtle has come out of the ocean. Sometimes the tracks are washed away by the tides and they are difficult to find. Sometimes a momma turtle comes ashore but does not dig a nest (called a false crawl). Sometimes the momma turtle hides the eggs so well the HBTP can’t find them.

When the rider finds tracks they call out a team of volunteers to search for the eggs. When the eggs are found the team will decide if the nest can stay where the mother laid it (this is called a natural nest) or to move it. Nests are only moved if it will not be safe at its original location. Factors to move a nest include: too close to the high tide line so there will be chances it will be washed over or flooded, too close to a walkway, too high an embankment or too many lights. Nests are marked and GPS taken and the morning rider checks the nest daily.

Photo is of a "crawl" on nest # 26 laid on June 18, 2020. 117 eggs from this nest were moved.
Also photo inside the nest of the egg chamber.

news photo news photo

Return To Main News Index Page