On
June 3, 23 Kemp's ridley nests were found on the Texas coast including 1 on
Galveston Island, 3 on Matagorda Island, 1 on Mustang Island, 1 on North Padre
Island north of Padre Island National Seashore, 12 at Padre Island National
Seashore, and 5 on South Padre Island. The 23 is the most Kemp's ridley nests
documented on the Texas
coast in a single day since record keeping began in 1980.
So far this
year, 148 Kemp's ridley nests have been confirmed on the Texas coast including
(north to south in state): Bolivar Peninsula 4 Galveston Island 5 Brazoria
County, just north of Surfside 1 Surfside Beach 1, Matagorda Island 10 San Jose
Island 3 Mustang Island 5 North Padre Island 81, including 71 at Padre Island
National Seashore South Padre Island 31 Boca Chica Beach 7
The 148 nest
total exceeds the previous record of 128 Kemp's ridley nests found in Texas set
during 2007. This marks the fifth consecutive year that record numbers of Kemp's
ridley nests have been recorded in Texas
since record keeping began in 1980. This endangered sea turtle is a resident of
the Gulf
of Mexico
and was near extinction in the mid 80s.
This
is the 30th anniversary year of a cooperative program between the
Republic
of Mexico
and the United
States
to prevent their extinction which began in 1978. The
US
federal requirement to place Turtle Excluder Devices (TEDs) on shrimp trawls to
allow sea turtles to escape drowning combined with protection of the beaches in
Mexico
and the US
and a vigorous program of releasing hatchlings is credited with the increased
population of ridleys.
“After working to protect the Kemp’s ridleys for 26 years, I can tell you
this is a very happy day,” said Carole Allen, Gulf Office Director of the Sea
Turtle Restoration Project and founder of HEART (Help Endangered Animals-Ridley
Turtles) in 1982. “There are many
heroes and heroines to thank, but thousands of school children, many now adults,
should also be thanked for writing letters to the government asking for
protection for sea
turtles.”