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An armada of turtles, caught on drone cam, flocks to the Great Barrier Reef

Green turtles swimming ashore to Raine Island on the outer edge of the Great Barrier Reef. Image by Great Barrier Reef Foundation and Queensland Government.

  • New drone video shows thousands of endangered green turtles swimming ashore to Raine Island on the outer edges of the Great Barrier Reef.
  • Researchers captured this video to help survey the nesting turtle population, and in the process demonstrated that this technique is more effective than manually counting turtles from boats. They recorded 64,000 turtles nesting on Raine Island this season.
  • There’s been an increase in the number of nesting green turtles around the world, including Raine Island, likely due to conservation efforts and fishing moratoriums.
  • Team members at the Raine Island Recovery Project are working to restore the island’s beaches to ensure that green turtles can continue to safely nest there.

From high above, the blue sea looks like it’s speckled with tiny white dots. But a closer look reveals more: each dot is actually a sea turtle swimming toward the shore of a coral cay. There are thousands of them. Over the course of the nesting season, about 64,000 landed on the beach.

In December 2019, researchers working with the Great Barrier Reef Foundation’s Raine Island Recovery Project captured this video as a way of counting the number of green turtles (Chelonia mydas) swimming ashore to nest on Raine Island, located on the outer edges of the Great Barrier Reef. Raine Island is the world’s largest rookery for green turtles, according to the Great Barrier Reef Foundation.

In previous years, researchers surveyed the green turtle population by painting white stripes on their shells with non-toxic paint while the turtles nested in the sand, then manually counted them offshore.

“From a small boat, we then counted painted and non-painted turtles, but eyes are attracted much more to a turtle with a bright white stripe than an unpainted turtle, resulting in biased counts and reduced accuracy,” Andrew Dunstan, from the Queensland state government’s Department of Environment and Science (DES), said in a statement.

An aerial view of green turtles near Raine Island. Image by Christian Miller

The use of a drone, or unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), proved much more effective. Researchers were able to analyze each frame of the video, and accurately count the number of painted and non-painted turtles. The team recently published their findings in the journal PLOS ONE.

“When we compared drone counts to observer counts we found that we had underestimated the numbers in the past by a factor 1.73,” Richard Fitzpatrick, principal scientist at Biopixel Oceans Foundation and co-author of the paper, said in a statement. “By using drones we have adjusted historical data. What previously took a number of researchers a long time can now be done by one drone operator in under an hour.”

Green turtles are an endangered species, according to the IUCN, the global authority on the conservation status of biological species. Threats include the intentional harvesting of eggs, disease, light pollution, habitat degradation, and fishing net entanglement. But in recent years, there’s been an uptick in green turtle nesting, which scientists believe is due to expanded conservation efforts and fishing moratoriums.

Raine Island itself has noticed a recent upsurge in turtle nesting. The last two seasons, only about 20,000 turtles nested on the island, a spokesperson for the Great Barrier Reef Foundation told Mongabay. This season, there was a marked increase to about 64,000 nesting turtles.

To ensure that green turtles continue to nest on Raine Island, the team at the Raine Island Recovery Project are working to re-profile the beach to make it more habitable for nesting turtles, and to fence off any eroded sections of the beach to prevent turtles from falling off any steep edges.

Turtles nesting on Raine Island. Image by Christian Miller.

“Raine Island is the world’s largest green turtle nesting site and that’s why we’re working … to protect and restore the island’s critical habitat,” Anna Marsden, managing director of the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, said in a statement. “We’re taking action to improve and rebuild the island’s nesting beaches and building fences to prevent turtle deaths, all working to strengthen the island’s resilience and ensure the survival of our northern green turtles and many other species.”

Citation:

Dunstan, A., Robertson, K., Fitzpatrick, R., Pickford, J., & Meager, J. (2020). Use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for mark-resight nesting population estimation of adult female green sea turtles at Raine Island. PLOS ONE. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0228524

Banner image caption: Green turtles swimming ashore to Raine Island on the outer edge of the Great Barrier Reef. Image by Great Barrier Reef Foundation and Queensland Government.

Elizabeth Claire Alberts is a staff writer for Mongabay. Follow her on Twitter @ECAlberts.

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