Turtle numbers stranded on British and Irish shores rise over winter

Storm events off eastern US or in Caribbean may have moved turtles from usual range in tropical waters into Atlantic currents

According to reports to the Marine Conservation Society and Marine Environmental Monitoring, 13 juvenile turtles have been stranded since November – 12 loggerheads (as above) and one Kemp’s ridley turtle. Photograph: Michel Gunther/WWF/PA
According to reports to the Marine Conservation Society and Marine Environmental Monitoring, 13 juvenile turtles have been stranded since November – 12 loggerheads (as above) and one Kemp’s ridley turtle. Photograph: Michel Gunther/WWF/PA

Small, wrinkled and stranded in chilly waters, young hard-shelled turtles have been turning up on the beaches of the UK and Ireland in higher numbers than usual over the winter.

According to reports to the Marine Conservation Society and Marine Environmental Monitoring, 13 juvenile turtles have been stranded since November – 12 loggerheads and one Kemp’s ridley turtle.

“It’s definitely higher this year than it has been before,” said Amy Pilsbury, a citizen science programme developer at the Marine Conservation Society, adding that typically only five or six turtles are reported over the period.

Ms Pilsbury said that while investigations would be needed to confirm the reason for the increase, it could be down to storm events off the east coast of the US and in the Caribbean. These may have moved the turtles from their usual range in tropical waters into Atlantic currents – a particular concern regarding those that are young or injured.

READ SOME MORE

“Normally [the turtles that get stranded] are either juveniles – so it just means that they’re not quite strong enough to swim against some of the currents yet – or it might be that they’re an adult that has some kind of damaged flipper or something that affects their ability to swim,” Ms Pilsbury said.

January 2022: A rare loggerhead sea turtle which was discovered washed up on a beach on Muighinis, an island near Carna, has been brought to an aquarium in Galway for rehabilitation. Video: Siobhan Kennedy & Mark South

Once these turtles end up off course, there is another danger, she said. “Because it’s so cold, they go into cold water shock. So that means they just basically start to shut down and stop swimming even more. Obviously, eventually that leads them to them being beached.”

Although it might be tempting to simply return the reptiles to the water, experts say this could prove fatal.

Michael Viney: Efforts continue to protect leatherback and loggerhead turtlesOpens in new window ]

Loggerhead turtle washes up in Connemara after ‘Nemo’-like epicOpens in new window ]

Aer Lingus to fly endangered turtle washed up on Irish beach to the Canary IslandsOpens in new window ]

“Often if people find them they’ll be really shut down. It might even look like they’re not alive, even if they are,” Ms Pilsbury said.

Instead, the team recommend that turtles should be tucked up in a damp towel and popped on their belly in a sheltered location or in a box or a basket, with their bottom slightly raised to help water drain from their lungs, and their nostrils uncovered.

While the majority of the turtles have turned up in Devon and Cornwall, strandings have also been reported in Anglesey, and in Co Mayo in Ireland.

The Marine Conservation Society urges anyone who discovers a stranded turtle to call the team. “Normally we will try our best to get out there as soon as possible and collect them,” Ms Pilsbury said. – Guardian service