The_Green_Sea_Turtle

advertisement

Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata

Class: Reptilia

Order: Chelonia

Family: Cheloniidae

Genus: Chelonia

Species: mydas

Subspecies: mydas mydas, mydas agassizii

This image courtesy of Nisbet Business Services

A green sea turtle infected with the fibropapillomas virus

The green sea turtle got its name because of the greenish color of its cartilage and the fat deposits around its internal organs.

An ecosystem is the interrelationship between a community of living organisms. Whereas if one animal or plant were completely taken away from the ecosystem, all the others could be affected over time.

This image courtesy of Lost Horizons Resorts

Green sea turtle hatchlings

The green turtle has been used for our consumption, through capture during commercial shrimp trawling, egg poaching, and erosion of nesting beaches.

Mechanical raking of nesting beaches can result in compact sand and cause tire rots, which may hinder or trap hatchlings.

Traveling?

Keep your purchases legal!

http://alaska.fws.gov/LawEnforcement/factsheets/buyerbeware.cfm

The diet preferred by the adult green turtle is marine algae and grasses, while the juvenile’s diet mostly consists of jellyfish, sponges, snails, worms, and small mollusks (The Animal

Diversity Web, 1995-2001).

As an adult the Green Turtle is strictly a herbivorous sea turtle (herbivorous meaning plant-eating or feeding on plants).

This image courtesy of MIR

Mating green sea turtles

 Nesting season is normally in May and June.

 Courtship occurs for the male and female by nuzzling their heads or gently biting their flippers and neck.

 To guarantee fertilization a female will often mate with several males.

 Once every three years the female lays her eggs far above the high tide line.

 The sea is where the male always stays.

 The female uses her flippers to dig a hole and there she lays about 100 eggs.

 Once hatched, the green sea turtle crawls directly towards the water where it spends most of its adult life.

Courtesy:

 Incubation is normally 50-70 days.

California Turtle and Tortoise Club, 1992

 Eggs hatch at night.

Download