
Sea turtles are large air-breathing reptiles remarkably adapted to life in the sea. They live in all but the coldest of the world's oceans, but nest only on tropical and subtropical beaches where it is warm enough to incubate their eggs. All sea turtles are protected by federal and state laws.
Sea turtles have a low streamline shell and powerful, oversized front limbs, adaptations that enable them to swim for great distances. They have no teeth but use their jaws to crush and tear food. The smallest sea turtle, the Kemp's Ridley, weighs about 75 to 100 pounds when mature, while adults of the largest species, the leatherback, can weigh almost 1,300 pounds and may be eight feet in length.


CLASSIFICATION
OF SEA TURTLES
The following classification has
been taken from the booklet and brochure
"Florida's Sea Turtles, ©
1983, Florida Power & Light Company

Hawksbill Turtle
The endangered
hawksbill, a relatively small turtle, has been hunted to the brink of extinction
for its beautiful shell. Once fairly common in Florida, these turtles now
nest here only rarely. Hawksbills feed on sponges and other invertebrates
and tend to nest on small isolated beaches.
Kemp's Ridley
The rarest and smallest of all the sea turtles, the endangered
Kemp's Ridley feeds in the coastal waters of Florida on blue crabs and other
crabs and shrimp. All Kemp's Ridleys nest on a single stretch of beach on
the Gulf Coast of Mexico.
Loggerhead Turtle
The loggerhead turtle is the most common sea turtle in Florida.
It is listed as a threatened species under the federal Endangered Species
Act. Named for its large head, which can be ten inches wide, it has powerful
jaws to crush the heavy-shelled clams, crabs and encrusting animals on which
it feeds. In the past few years, 49,000 to 68,000 loggerhead nests have been
recorded in Florida annually.
Green Turtle
The green turtle, named for the greenish color of its body
fat, is listed as endangered in Florida. Most green turtles nest in the Caribbean
but 500 to 2000 nests are recorded in Florida each year. Green turtles have
been hunted for centuries for their meat and gelatinous "calipee" that is
made into soup. Hunting and egg gathering have reduced their number greatly.
Green turtles are the only sea turtles that eat plants. They graze on the
vast beds of seagrasses found throughout the tropics. Some populations travel
over a thousand miles over open ocean to nest on islands in the mid-Atlantic.
Leatherback Turtle
The endangered leatherback turtle is the largest and most
active of the sea turtles. They travel thousands of miles, dive thousands
of feet deep, and venture into more colder water than any other kind of sea
turtle. Up to eight feet in length, these huge turtles have a rubbery dark
shell marked by seven narrow ridges that extend the length of the back. Remarkably,
leatherbacks feed on jellyfish and soft-bodied animals that would appear to
provide very little nutrition for such huge animals. Ingestion of plastic
bags and egg collecting are reasons for mortality and population declines.
About 100 to 200 leatherback nests are recorded in Florida each year




