The State of the World's Sea Turtles | SWOT

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Threats to Sea Turtles: Coastal Development

By BLAIR WITHERINGTON

Sprawling beachfront development in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, leaves little undisturbed habitat for nesting turtles. © Phillip Colla

Imagine the global changes sea turtles have endured over 100 million years. Now envision images of our planet from space throughout that record. A fast-forward through those images would reveal flickers of astounding turmoil—continents colliding and others torn in two, drifting apart as their margins pulse with sea-level changes that lap at the land like waves on a beach. Beach waves are more than a metaphor for coastal change. At each stop-frame in that movie of land-sea interplay, those margins had sand... sand that has fostered two million generations of sea turtles.

Witnessing what sea turtles have survived, we’d be forgiven for concluding that sea turtles have the capacity to persist through any global transition. Some changes have unique, detrimental effects from which recovery is uncertain. In our imaginary Earth time-lapse, few of us would be quick enough to hit the pause button at the very end and catch a critical change to Earth’s sandy margins. It’s distinct, it’s profound, and it’s us—the widespread modification of coastal environments to accommodate our development.

Coastal Development is one of the five main threats to sea turtles and encompasses many issues that harm turtles and their habitats. Foremost is habitat loss—sand mining, dredging of ship channels, and the construction of ports, roads, and buildings near nesting beaches. This construction has some of its most severe consequences stemming from our need to maintain it. Channels require jetties that block sand flow, starving downdrift beaches, and any structure built near a beach may require invasive defense from erosion. This defense includes installing walls and revetments that occupy sea turtle nesting areas and that contribute to sand loss. A bitter irony of our insistence on coastal permanence is that intensely defended beaches will eventually erode away, rather than migrate landward as beaches always have with rising sea levels.

Developed beaches are likely to have numerous barriers to sea turtle nesting, from walls and rocks to beach furniture and recreational equipment. These barriers cause nest mortality by restricting nesting to the lower beach where eggs are more likely to be washed away by erosion events. But the most widespread alteration of beaches from development is light pollution, which discourages turtles from nesting and misdirects and kills hatchlings emerging from nests at night.

Beach tourism is generally considered detrimental to sea turtle nesting because of its correlation with dense development, high resource use, and profound habitat alteration, especially light pollution. Yet, our visit to a beach need not be wholly detrimental to sea turtles. Across the world, nature-based tourism programs address the challenge of inspiring human behavior change by presenting nesting sea turtles as conservation ambassadors. In these meetings at sandy beaches, there is hope that we can learn to live sustainably with sea turtles, and perhaps, gain wisdom on how to adapt to such a dynamic coastal resource.

To learn more about coastal development and sea turtles, please peruse these informative articles from SWOT Reports past.

Blair Witherington (Inwater Research Group)

SWOT REPORT ARTICLES RELATED TO Coastal Development

  1. Venizelos, L., & Robinson, P. 2007. Controversial Conservation at Zakynthos. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 2: 33.

  2. Eckert, K. 2007. How Tourism, Tourists and Coastal Residents Can Be Stewards of Sea Turtles. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 2: 36.

  3. Boura, L., Grimanis, K., & Sfyroeras, E. 2014. Economic Recovery Takes Its Toll on Mediterranean Loggerheads. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 9: 36-37.

  4. Dutton, P. H., Balazs, G. H., & Frey, A. 2014. Hawaiian Nesting Range Shift. Offers Rare Learning Opportunity. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 9: 22-23

  5. Rousso, S., & Sanchez, C. 2014. Research Results Guide Turtle Protection in Baja California Sur, Mexico. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 9: 38-39.

  6. Cozens, J. 2014. Can Turtle Conservation and Tourism Development Coexist in Cabo Verde? In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 9: 40-41.

  7. Lopez, G. G., Lara, P. H., & Saliés, E. 2014. Pursuing Coastal Conservation in Northeastern Brazil as a Shared Responsibility. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 9: 42-43.

  8. Penié, I., Lozano, M., & Slater, K. 2015. Ancient Mayan "Place of the Turtles" Copes with Modern-Day Tourism. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 10: 28-29.

  9. Girard, A., & Honarvar, S. 2017. Urbanization Chips Away Turtle Habitats in West-Central Africa. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 12: 8-9.

  10. Kelly, I., & Homcy, J. 2017. Trapped in the Crossroads of Honu Conservation. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 12: 38-39.

  11. Eastman, S., & Appelson, G. 2017. Coastal Armoring and Rising Seas Put a Squeeze on Turtles. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 12: 12-13.

  12. Saliés, E. C., Berchieri, N., Colman, L. P., Bosquirolli, M. R. B., Santos, A., Tognin, F., Marcovaldi, M. A., Rocha, V., & Lara, P. H. 2018. Itapuã, Brazil: A Case Study for Urban Engagement in Turtle Conservation. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 13: 40-41.

 

Stay tuned for more in this series based on “The 5 Biggest Threats to Sea Turtles” 2006. Their Greatest Challenge in 100 Million Years: Facing the Hazards of Humankind. In SWOT Report—The State of the World’s Sea Turtles, vol. 1: 5.