PHOTOS: Thousands of Leatherback Turtle Eggs Crushed By Bulldozers in Trinidad?

Written by Jay Blessed. Posted in Feature Posts, News

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Published on July 16, 2012 with No Comments

It is not new to hear of the abuse to one of the world’s endangered species, the leatherback turtles, especially in Trinidad.

In case you missed it, check out the heart-wrenching story of eggs and hatchlings being crushed on the Grande Riviere beach on the Northern coast of the island.

Here’s the story from BBC News

Thousands of leatherback turtle eggs and hatchlings have been crushed by bulldozers on Trinidad’s northern coast, conservationists say.

Workers had been called in to redirect a river that was eroding Grande Riviere beach, in front of a hotel used by tourists to watch the turtles.

Environmentalists say workers botched the job and destroyed some 20,000 eggs.

The mile-long stretch of beach is regarded as a leading nesting sites for the biggest of all sea turtles.

Sherwin Reyz of the Grande Riviere Environmental Organisation said vultures and stray dogs ate many of the hatchlings whose shells had been crushed by the heavy machinery.

“They had a very good meal; I was near tears,” he said.

The owner of the hotel who had asked the government to redirect the river because it was threatening his property and the rich turtle nesting areas in front of it also expressed his dismay.

Leatherback turtles can grow up to weigh a tonne and live to 100 years

“For some reason they dug up the far end of the beach, absolutely encroaching into the good nesting areas,” hotelier Piero Guerrini told the Associated Press news agency.

The government has so far not commented on the claim.

Leatherbacks return to lay their eggs on the beach where they were born and Trinidad’s northern coastline has some of the world’s densest leatherback turtle nesting areas.

MEANWHILE, according to CTNTWorld, a local conservationist group says the local and global media were fed an inaccurate and sensationalized version of the events in Grande Riviere by persons not directly involved in the turtle conservation movement.

President of the Caribbean Institute of Sustainability, Mr. Steven Greenleaf, said the fact that the turtle-crushing incident received such a passionate response from around the world is good news for the turtles. However, he stated that much of what has been reported is simply untrue.

He acknowledged that some viable hatchlings were killed and the best estimate given by turtle conservationists, who were actually there, was that between 100 and 200 hatchlings were killed, and not the “thousands,” which were reported.

 

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