Tourists Get in the Way of Sea Turtles Laying Eggs in Costa Rica
Source: Time Magazine
Tourists Get in the Way of Sea Turtles Laying Eggs in Costa Rica
Sept. 18, 2015
Too busy taking photos and petting the reptiles to notice they were disrupting breeding
A large group of tourists disrupted sea turtles from laying their eggs on a beach in Costa Rica last weekend, according to local news sources.
Every year hundreds of sea turtles journey to a wildlife refuge in Guanacaste, Costa Rica in order to lay their eggs. This year, though, tourists were able to access the refuge because droughts have lowered water levels that usually make the area inaccessible to people.
The tourists reportedly took photos, touched the turtles and stood on their nests, forcing several to return to the ocean without laying their eggs, according to La Nacion.
Costa Ricas Secretary of Environment is investigating why officials were unable to control the tourists.
Read more: http://time.com/4040062/tourists-costa-rica-sea-turtles/
(Short article, no more at link.)
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Tourists Thwart Turtles from Nesting in Costa Rica
By ELISABETH MALKIN and PAULINA VILLEGAS
SEPT. 18, 2015
MEXICO CITY The day-trippers swarmed onto the beach to watch one of natures most extraordinary sights, hundreds of thousands of olive ridley sea turtles crawling out of the ocean to lay their eggs in the sand.
The turtles did not want the company. Scared off by the thousands of tourists massed along Ostional Beach on Costa Ricas Pacific Coast, snapping selfies and perching their children on the turtles backs, the ancient reptiles simply turned around and retreated into the sea.
It was a mess, said Yamileth Baltodano, a tour guide who was at the scene when the turtles were scared away two weeks ago.
What happened during the first weekend in September was a one-time event, when a confluence of factors allowed the utterly unexpected to take place. But it was a cautionary tale for the conservationists charged with protecting the turtles, which are classified as vulnerable, not to mention a social media sensation. Now Costa Rican officials are scrambling to make sure it does not happen again.
More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/19/world/americas/tourists-thwart-turtles-from-nesting-in-costa-rica.html?_r=0
JustAnotherGen
(31,969 posts)These folks probably did another "excursion" where they fed the monkeys. And a fed monkey is a dead monkey. Respect the land, the animals, the ecosystem - the people who live there. Shame on them for not doing that. I love CR. love it to the point that we are going down there to look for a place to buy this winter.
Know why I love it? The people love it. They take pride in it. It's beautiful land and kind people. The tour operator should be shut down and the only people that should be allowed to 'run' this tour are the state employed Eco guides. That way you ensure people don't infringe on the culture - and the culture is the land. The guides we have had while learning the jungle always stress 'do no harm' - and it's because we only book with state employees.
Omaha Steve
(99,800 posts)Human101948
(3,457 posts)and they will get the message eventually.
7962
(11,841 posts)What a bunch of damn fools
JustABozoOnThisBus
(23,375 posts)... that I would want to include her egg-laying activity in a selfie with my face.
What a treat for a turtle!
edit to add: , because sometimes it's necessary.
Earth_First
(14,910 posts)This should have been caught immediately and the area shut down to human interference.
lunasun
(21,646 posts)even get close to the nesting activities. Keep a good distance be quiet and if night no artificial light . .. its a beautiful sight even by moonlight
I suppose since it is so low now and open that next move is the egg poachers will be right there to take any that did lay one although there used to conservation people who stayed up all night too shoo them off the beach(poachers not the turtles)
but they cant get them all and many most likely will not lay with this crapfest as stated
Those pictures makes me sick to my stomach.
Does anybody see the species imbalance portrayed in the pictures above, where there's so many of one species in every nook and cranny on Earth, that they displace all other species?
7.4 billion and still growing out of control.
graegoyle
(532 posts)KittyWampus
(55,894 posts)The females come ashore to lay their eggs and go into a sort of trance as they do it. The volunteers prevent tourists from taking photos with flashes at night because it disturbs the turtles.
Fun fact- when baby turtles reach the sea only females will ever touch land again. Male turtles spend their entire lives at sea.
awoke_in_2003
(34,582 posts)geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)season there.