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Wednesday, June 15, 2011

The Atlantic Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas)




Current Status

The green turtle is listed as endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. Under the U.S. Endangered Species Act of 1973, the green turtle was listed as threatened except for the breeding populations in Florida and on the Pacific coast of Mexico, where it is listed as Endangered.

Green turtles continue to be heavily exploited by humans, and the destruction and loss of nesting and foraging sites is a serious problem. Humans have already caused the extinction of large green turtle populations, including those that once nested in Bermuda and Cayman Islands. The status of green turtle populations is difficult to determine because of our lack of knowledge about their life cycles. The number of nests deposited in Florida appears to be increasing, but we don't know whether this is due to an increase in the number of nests or because we have started to monitor nesting beaches more closely.

Description

The green sea turtle is the largest hard-shelled sea turtle. Adults of this species commonly reach 100 cm in carapace length and 150 kg in mass. The average size of a female nesting in Florida is 101.5 cm straight carapace length, with an average body mass of 136 kg.

Hatchling green turtles weigh about 25 g (about a handful of Smarties) and have a carapace about 50 mm long. Hatchlings are black on top and white underneath. The plastron of Atlantic green turtles remains a yellowish white throughout life, but the carapace changes colour from black to various shades of gray, green, brown and black, forming swirls and irregular patterns on their shells.

Growth

Growth rates of pelagic-stage green turtles have not been measured under natural conditions; however, growth rates of green turtles have been measured at their feeding grounds. Green turtles grow slowly.

In the southern Bahamas, green turtles grew from 30 to 75 cm in 17 years, and according to Bjorndal and Bolten, growth rate decreased with increasing carapace length. Growth rates measured in green turtles from Florida and Puerto Rico fall within the range of growth rates measured in the southern Bahamas. Based on growth rate studies of wild green turtles, the researchers Balazs, Frazer and Ehrhart estimate the age at sexual maturity range anywhere from 20 to 50 years.

Habitat

Green turtles occupy three habitat types:

High-energy oceanic beaches.
Convergence zones in the pelagic habitat.
Benthic feeding grounds in relatively shallow, protected waters.
Females deposit egg clutches on high energy beaches, usually on islands, where a deep nest cavity can be dug above the high water line. Hatchlings leave the beach and apparently move into convergence zones in the open ocean where they spend an undetermined length of time (Carr, 1986). When turtles reach a carapace length of approximately 20 to 25 cm, they leave the pelagic habitat and enter benthic feeding grounds. Most commonly these foraging habitats are pastures of seagrasses and/or algae, but small green turtles can also be found over coral reefs, worm reefs and rocky bottoms. Some feeding areas, such as Miskito Cays, Nicaragua, support a complete size range of green turtles from 20 cm to breeding adults. Coral reefs or rocky outcrops near feeding pastures are often used as resting areas, both at night and during the day.

Diet

Scientists assume that post-hatchling, pelagic-stage green turtles are omnivorous, but there are no data on diet from this age class. Our personal experience with a juvenile Hawaiian green confirms this theory. Our first turtle encounter resulted when a juvenile swam up to us and attempted to take some of the cuttlefish we were using to attract eels for photographic purposes.

Scientists do know that once green turtles shift to benthic feeding grounds, they are herbivores. They feed on both seagrasses and algae.

Population Distribution and Size

The green turtle can be found throughout the world in all tropical and sub-tropical oceans. In the U.S., Atlantic green turtles can be found around the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and continental U.S. from Texas to Massachusetts. Important feeding areas for green turtles in Florida include Indian River Lagoon, Florida Keys, Florida Bay, Homosassa, Crystal River and Cedar Key.

Major green nesting colonies in the Atlantic are located on Ascension Island, Aves Island, Costa Rica and Suriname. In the U.S., green turtles nest in small numbers in the United States Virgin Islands, and in Puerto Rico. Greens nest in larger numbers in Florida but actual data is presently not helpful in assessing trends in nesting.

Reproduction

Female green turtle emerge at night to deposit eggs, the process taking an average of two hours. Up to seven clutches are deposited at 12 to 14 day intervals, but the average is probably two or three clutches. Accurate counts of the number of clutches per season are difficult to get. The average clutch size is usually 110-115 eggs, but this varies among populations.

It is uncommon for females to produce clutches in successive years. Usually 2, 3, 4 or more years intervene between breeding seasons. Mating occurs in the water off the nesting beaches. Little is known about the reproductive biology of males, but evidence is accumulating that males migrate to the nesting beach every year.

The hatching success of undisturbed nests is usually high, but on some beaches, predators destroy a high percentage of nests. Large numbers of nests are also destroyed by inundation and erosion.

One interesting discovery in recent years is that incubation temperatures determine the sex of hatchling turtles. In 1985, Standora and Spotila reported this effect on green turtles. Eggs incubated below a pivotal temperature--which might vary among populations--produce primarily males, and eggs incubated above this temperature produce primarily females.

Movements

The navigation feats of the green turtle are well known, but poorly understood. We know that hatchlings and adult females on the nesting beach orient toward the ocean using light cues. For a long time, no one knew what cues were employed in pelagic movements, in movements among foraging grounds, or in migrations between foraging grounds and nesting beaches. Recently published work, however, has suggested that the earth's magnetic field plays a role in these feats.

Because green turtles feed in marine pastures in quiet, low-energy areas, but nest on high energy beaches, their feeding and nesting habitats are, of necessity, located some distance apart. Green turtles that nest on Ascension Island forage along the coast of Brazil, some 1,000 km away! The location of the foraging grounds of green turtles that nest in Florida is still unknown.

It has been generally accepted, but not proven, that green turtles return to nest on the beach where they were born. Green turtles do exhibit strong site-fidelity in successive nesting seasons. Our personal experience with Hawaiian green turtles is that they also exhibit strong site fidelity for their foraging grounds.

Atlantic Green Turtle Quick Facts

Green sea turtles are listed as threatened or endangered throughout their habitat.

The green sea turtle is found world-wide in warm ocean waters
A gentle vegetarian, feeding mainly on sea grasses and algae
The most valuable of all reptiles, they are killed for their skins, calipee, meat and shells.
Exploitation has already caused extinction of populations in Bermuda and the Cayman Islands
In parts of Florida (Indian River) more than 50% of the green sea turtles are afflicted with fibropapilloma tumors
The largest of the hard-shelled marine turtles: common adult weight of 150 kg and length of over 100 cm
Hatchlings: 4-5 cm in length
Green sea turtles that nest at Ascension Island forage along the coast of Brazil and so must make a migration of 1,000 km to reach their nesting site!

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Danger species


Animals in Danger


American crocodile
American crocodiles lay eggs. They hide their eggs under twigs and leaves, or bury them in the sand. Some crocodiles help their young hatch, then carry them to the water in their mouth.
(Photo: Photo Courtesy U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service)
Today, nearly 400 animals are listed as threatened or endangered in the United States. Many are at risk of becoming extinct, or disappearing permanently. Unless efforts to save these vulnerable animals succeed, many of the country's greatest creatures will be lost forever. From the facts listed under each question mark, guess which animals are endangered. Click on the picture to find out more about each of these animals in trouble.

American Crocodile
  • American crocodiles are about 12 feet long. They live on land and in shallow water, swamps, and marshes.
  • American crocodiles like to float in the water with only their eyes and nose above the surface.
  • American crocodiles eat mostly small animals, which they grab with their strong jaws and razor-sharp teeth.
  • American crocodiles lay eggs. They hide their eggs under twigs and leaves, or bury them in the sand.
  • Some crocodiles help their young hatch, then carry them to the water in their mouth.


Habitat
Southern Florida, Mexico, Central and South America, Caribbean islands

Why It's Endangered
Overhunted for its hide
Habitat destruction


Gray bats
Gray bats hang upside-down to help digest their food.
(Photo: Jeff Lepore/Photo Researchers Inc.)
Gray Bat
  • Gray bats only weigh up to half an ounce. Their wings measure about 1.5 inches across.
  • Gray bats live in colonies, or groups, in caves. The caves are usually found near a river or lake.
  • During the day, gray bats sleep. At night, they eat up to 1,000 mosquitoes or other pests in one hour.
  • Gray bats hang upsidedown to help digest their food.
  • Gray bats hibernate, or sleep, in the cold winter months.
  • There are about 2 million bats, but their numbers are shrinking. Almost all gray bats hibernate in one of nine caves.


Habitat
Most gray bats live in caves in Alabama, northern Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee.

Why endangered? 
Loss of habitat
Use of pesticides to kill the insects they eat


Big horn sheep
Bighorn sheep live in herds, or groups. The male sheep with the biggest horns is usually in charge. Male horns can weigh as much as 30 pounds.
(Photo: Mike Barlow/Dembinsky Photo Associates)
Peninsular Bighorn Sheep
  • Bighorn sheep can weigh as much as 280 pounds and stand about 3 feet tall.
  • They live in dry, desert mountain ranges, near rocky cliffs.
  • Bighorn sheep eat grasses, twigs, and leaves.
  • Male sheep are called rams and can be recognized by their huge, brown horns. The horns curl back over the ears, down, and up past the cheeks.
  • They live in herds, or groups. The male sheep with the biggest horns is usually in charge. Male horns can weigh as much as 30 pounds.
  • Males will use their massive horns to fight. The fights can last as long as 24 hours.
  • Females are called ewes. They are smaller than rams and have shorter, smaller horns.


Habitat
Nevada and California to west Texas and south into Mexico

Why It's Endangered
Loss of habitat
Poaching
Drought and disease


California condors
In 1982, there were fewer than 25 California condors left in the wild. Today, there are about 200.
(Photo: Frier/Scott Nikon/U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service)
California Condor
  • Condors pair for life and breed once every two years, producing only one egg.
  • Condors roost, or sleep, in large groups. They "talk" to each other with hisses, growls, grunts, and body language.
  • From tip to tip, their wings can stretch up to 9 feet.
  • Instead of flapping their wings, condors soar on wind currents.
  • Condors are scavengers, which means they eat animals that are already dead. But they don't rely on their sense of smell. They watch for other scavengers eating dead animals.
  • In 1982, there were fewer than 25 California condors left in the wild. Today, there are about 200.


Habitat
California, Arizona, Utah

Why It's Endangered
Loss of habitat
Hunting
Collisions with power lines


Florida panthers
Florida panthers only eat meat. They may eat only once a week. They sleep as much as 18 hours a day and usually hunt alone at sunrise and sunset.
(Photo: Oxford Scientific/PictureQuest)
Florida Panther
  • Florida panthers are fast and lean. They can weigh up to 150 pounds and are about 3 feet long.
  • Panthers only eat meat. They may eat only once a week. They sleep as much as 18 hours a day.
  • They usually hunt alone at sunrise and sunset.
  • They will cover what they don't eat with twigs and leaves to hide food from other animals.
  • Since 1972, cars have hit and killed 44 Florida panthers.


Habitat
Southwest Florida

Why It's Endangered
Loss of habitat
Lack of food
Disease


West Indian Manatee
The upper lip of the West Indian manatee is divided into two halves, which close like a pair of pliers on plants. There are less than 2,000 manatees living in the U.S.
(Photo: Oxford Scientific/PictureQuest)
West Indian Manatee
  • West Indian manatees eat water plants.
  • They are slow and friendly.
  • West Indian manatees can eat more than 100 pounds of plants in a day.
  • They may grow to 13 feet long and weigh up to 3,500 pounds.
  • Their upper lip is divided into two halves, which close like a pair of pliers on plants.
  • There are less than 2,000 manatees living in the U.S.


Habitat
Florida, Georgia, Puerto Rico, Mexico, the Caribbean

Why It's Endangered
Overhunting
Habitat destruction
Boats


Atlantic salmon
Atlantic salmon are about 2 1/2 feet long and weigh a hefty 10 pounds. Only a small number of salmon reach the ocean after they are born. The few that make it can live for up to seven years.
(Photo: Paul Nicklen/National Geographic Image Collection )
Atlantic Salmon
  • Atlantic salmon are about 2 1/2 feet long and weigh a hefty 10 pounds.
  • Salmon are born in rivers. Then, they swim to the ocean, where they live most of their lives.
  • Only a small number of salmon reach the ocean after they are born. The few that make it can live for up to seven years.
  • Salmon swim upstream back to the place they were born tospawn, or reproduce.
  • Salmon may swim upstream as far as 2,000 miles. The journey may take many months.
  • Salmon eat shrimp, squid, and other small fish.


Habitat
North Atlantic Ocean

Why It's Endangered
Logging in watersheds
Chemicals from farms
Introduction of nonnative salmon that escape from pens and breed with wild salmon
Acid rain


Humpback whales
Humpback whales eat by opening their mouth wide and swimming through schools of small fish. There are only about 25,000 humpback whales living today.
(Photo: Index Stock Imagery/PictureQuest )
Humpback Whale
  • Every year, humpback whales swim from cold polar waters to warm tropical waters to mate.
  • They usually travel in groups.
  • Humpback whales talk to each other with moans and screams.
  • When trying to attract female whales, males repeat some sounds for a long time. These "songs" can sound beautiful.
  • Humpback whales eat by opening their mouth wide and swimming through schools of small fish.
  • There are only about 25,000 humpback whales living today.


Habitat
All the world's oceans

Why It's Endangered
Hunting
Pollution
Coastal development


Whooping cranes
Whooping cranes are the tallest birds in North America. They stand about 5 feet tall and have long legs and a long neck. Their wings stretch about 7 feet.
(Photo: Ryan Hagerty/U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service)
Whooping Crane
  • Whooping cranes are the tallest birds in North America. They mate for life.
  • They stand about 5 feet tall and have long legs and a long neck. Their wings stretch to about 7 feet.
  • Whooping cranes eat clams, crabs, snails, frogs, and berries.
  • Their call sounds like a very loud bugle.
  • There is only one wild migratory flock of whooping cranes with about 194 birds.
  • Every winter, they fly about 2,700 miles from Canada to Texas.
  • During their long flight, young whooping cranes are often killed when they fly into electrical or telephone wires.


Habitat
Spring and summer: Canada
Fall and winter: Texas

Why It's Endangered
Collisions with power lines during flight

Yarsagumba


Yarsagumba with its Latin name cordyceps sinesis literally means summer plant and winter insect in Tibetan. Before the rainy season begins, spores of the cordyceps mushroom settle on the heads of caterpillars’ that lives underground. The fungus gets so much into the body of the caterpillars’ that it grows out through its head and drains all the energy from the insect and ultimately it dies.
Yarsagumba, Yarshagumba or Yarchagumba is a rare and unique herb that grows in the meadows above 3,500 meters (11,483 feet) in the Himalayan region of Nepal. There are various types of famous medicinal plants found in Nepal but the popularity of yarsagumba is simply overwhelming. For the last couple of years, the trade of yarsagumba is increasing and it has been regarded as an expensive life saving tonic. Headache, toothache or any other disease - yarsagumba is the remedy. And not only that, it is also believed to be a cure for sexual impotency – a Himalayan Herbal Viagra.
Every year during May and June, thousands of villagers from remote areas risking their own lives head for high mountains to collect yarsagumba. It is estimated that one villager can earn up to Rs. 2,500 approximately to $35 a day by collecting yarsagumba which is beyond the monthly salary of many Nepalese households. Dolpa – a remote district in western Nepal with high steep valleys and dry climate is one of the foremost areas for collecting yarsagumba. Almost 50% of the annual supply of yarsagumba comes from Dolpa alone. Here, not only the adults but school goers also take unofficial holidays in search of the gold rush.
Collection of yarsagumba was illegal until 2001 but following its popularity and the lobbying from various organizations, the Government lifted the ban but imposed a royalty rate of Rs. 20,000 (US$ 280) per kilogram (2.2lbs). One kilo of yarsagumba that costs about Rs. 315 (US$ 5/6) in 1992 increased to Rs. 105,000 (US$ 1,435) by the year 2002 and the price has been shooting up so as the international interest on the mysterious half-caterpillar-half-mushroom known as yarsagumba.

best 10 bird in world


Species [range]
Photo/art [see credits];
all photos taken in the wild
Summary of reasons for this choice

1
Philippine Eagle
Pithecophaga jefferyi
[Philippines]
Add caption
The largest and most spectacular raptor in the world is also among the rarest — it is threatened with extinction as Philippine forests are destroyed. Perhaps only 250 adults remain in isolated & difficult to reach remnants. "Seeing the Philippine Eagle" page has some personal experiences. I chose this as my #1 most wanted bird back in 19Kindle, Wi-Fi, Graphite, 6" Display with New E Ink Pearl Technology - includes Special Offers & Sponsored Screensavers75, and it remains the best bird in the world.
2
Wilson's
Bird-of-Paradise

Cicinnurus respublica
[Batanta & Waigeo Is.; off w. New Guinea]
Of all the incredible birds of paradise, none is more remote and spectacular than this species whose latin name commemorates the French revolution. Its bare crown glows neon-blue as the male performs on his carefully tended forest floor display site. An almost unbelievably wonderful bird to watch (which is not at all easy to do); see my "Birds of Paradise" page for a bit more.

3
Gray-necked Rockfowl[Red-headed Picathartes]Picathartes oreas
[w. central Africa]
Huge predators and gaudy passerines are wonderful, but few birds capture my imagination as the elusive ground-dwelling enigmas of tropical forests. None are more unique, impressive, and rare than the two rockfowl of Africa. The adventure to reach a cave in which they build mud nests is a peak experience of any life; see my "Rockfowl" page for much more about this fabulous central African bird, best searched for in Cameroon or Gabon.

4
White-necked Rockfowl
[Yellow-headed Picathartes]
Picathartes gymnocephalus
[west Africa]
Along with the Congo Peafowl (#7 below), African field ornithologists have long considered the two rockfowl to be the best birds of Africa. This west African representative is now very rare in the fragments of forest still extant; see my "Rockfowl" page for details on the many unique attributes of these picathartes.

5
Kagu
Rhynochetos jubatus
[New Caledonia]
Once considered virtually impossible to see, this exceptional bird of very uncertain affinities is making a good recovery in the forest remnants due to predator removal and captive breeding. Still a shadowy ghost on the forest floor; see my "Kagu" page for more. Only a few hundred in the wild, it rates very high on uniqueness.

6
Horned Guan
Oreophasis derbianus
[sw Mexico & n Guatemala]
This huge near-mythical guan lives only in remote cloud forests atop extinct volcanoes; the bare vivid red horn is completely unique. Even a 40+ mile trek to its habitat does not guarantee finding any; it took me two trips 16 yrs apart. Much more on my "Quest for the Horned Guan" page.

7
Congo Peafowl
Afropavo congoensis
[central Africa]
Someone with enough time and money might be able to acquire the guides or information to find any other bird on this page, but you can't "buy" a look at a Congo Peafowl. Only recently have Western researchers seen any in the wild. Almost nothing is known of its behavior. Perhaps things will change in the Democratic Republic of Congo where it is endemic, but this has been widely considered the most elusive bird on earth.

8
Harpy Eagle
Harpia harpyja
[s. Mexico to Brazil]
The second largest eagle in the world and the king of the Neotropics, this is the ultimate prize on any New World lowland forest visit. Its range is widespread but it requires huge swathes of jungle full of monkeys to survive. It is everywhere thinly spread and thus missed often even in prime habitat; see my "Seeing the Harpy Eagle" page for more.

9
Long-tailed Ground-Roller
Uratelornis chimaera
[sw. Madagascar]
Of all the great birds in Madagascar, this is the one that captured my imagination 25 years ago. It is the strangest of this Malagasy endemic family: a unique mix of a roadrunner, pitta & roller. It is the headline species of the unworldly spiny desert. It is decidedly rare and elusive; see my "Ground-Roller" page for more details.

10
any Tragopan
Tragopan sp.
[w. Himalayas to se. China]
In my initial picks 35 years ago, all five 'horned-pheasants' in genusTragopan made my "top 50." Now I go with this single pick, as any tragopan is a spectacular & elusive prize in montane forests of c. Asia. Western T. melanocephalus (shown) may be the rarest & most isolated (in n. Pakistan & Afghanistan); Blyth's T. blythii and Cabot's T. caboti (Chinese endemics or near-endemics) may as difficult to reach; while Temminck's T. temminckii and Satyr T. satyra may be the most colorful. Any one would make me happy.

CREDITS: