USVI: Green Sea Turtles

August 25th, 2005

The Caneel Bay Resort in St. John offers access to exquisite reef ecosystems that have been largely protected over time.  Off Caneel Bay’s Scott Beach you find a beautiful, clear patch of turtle grass, and unsurprisingly you may expect to encounter geen sea turtles grazing along the shallow bottom.

Green Sea Turtle Grazing off Caneel Bay, St. John, USVI

Sea turtles are internationally and federally protected species; give them a wide berth and take no action that might disturb their natural behavior.  But pause to enjoy their majestic presence as they swim gracefully by and surface for air between belly-fuls of turtle grass.

USVI: Rays of St. John

August 24th, 2005

Surveying corals and reef fish in Caneel Bay off St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands, we encountered a large number of rays cruising the bottom among the conchs in the low turtle grass.  They are so graceful as they fly through the water and a delight to study up-close & personal.

Rays Swimming off Caneel Bay, St. John, USVI

Squid — The Movie

August 24th, 2005

The graceful beauty of squid can best be experienced during a coral reef dive in the Caribbean clear waters off St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Squid Schooling off Caneel Bay, St. John, USVI

USVI: Hawksbill Sea Turtles

August 24th, 2005

The Caneel Bay Resort in St. John offers access to exquisite reef ecosystems that have been largely protected over time.  Off Caneel Bay’s Turtle Point you may expect to encounter hawksbill sea turtles. 

Hawksbill Sea Turtle among USVI Reefs

Sea turtles are internationally and federally protected species; give them a wide berth and take no action that might disturb their natural behavior.  But pause to enjoy their majestic presence as they swim by and hunt for sponges among the reefs.

Turtled Turtler and First Nesting — 10 June 2001

June 10th, 2001

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Soaked Turtle Researcher Don Lewis and Terrapin 

If your correspondent looks a bit disheveled and waterlogged, chalk it up to a Steve Irwin (a.k.a. Crocodile Hunter) moment.  What’s that?  An instant when rational thought yields to exuberance . . . when doing trumps thinking . . . when turtler gets turtled.

The tide was not good for terrapin research.  Between too high water and a westerly breeze blowing the long fetch up Blackfish Creek, we didn’t stand a chance.  So, as we paddled kayaks back across the channel, emptied handed and dejected, I was surprised to see a female terrapin coming straight at my boat, about two feet off port, heading in the opposite direction at the speed of the current, augmented by her powerful kick strokes, and escalated by the closing rate of my kayak. 

That’s when insanity struck.  Without a net, my only chance was to actually catch the speeding bullet by hand.  No time to assess risk, I reached for the terrapin, held her in one hand, as the kayak “turtled” on top of me.  The plosh could be heard the length of Blackfish Creek.  I was upside down, under water, staring an equally surprised terrapin eye-to-eye.  Somehow I managed to wiggle out of the kayak, stand waist deep in creek and mud, lugging the water filled boat with one hand and gently cradling the turtle in the other, as I waded back to shore.  Amid calls for a reprise from a hastily assembled audience of weekend invaders who had missed the photo-op of a lifetime, I bowed deferentially and settled down to transition from (mis)adventure to science.

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Female Terrapin #1105 with Healed Limb Trauma 

Number 1105 was a first time capture.  She is a 9-year-old terrapin at 16.65 centimeters and 786 grams, who shows signs of a misadventure of her own.  Her right front limb is missing below the joint in a wound which has well healed over time.  She also had lots of mud in her frontal cavity and even more in her rear quarter.  Other than the limb, she seemed a healthy and normal post-pubescent female. 

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Tiny Three-Gram Over-Wintered Terrapin Hatchling 

In the early afternoon, a resident of Lieutenant Island discovered a tiny hatchling in his driveway.  Obviously over-wintered, this baby is the second smallest in our records at 2.42 centimeters carapace length and only 3 grams.  Undeterred by its miniature status, it proved energetic and ready to conquer the world.  These little critters are so comically feisty in their approach to life that you gotta love ’em. 

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Nesting Female Diamondback Terrapin #1106

And this evening brought the first observed nesting terrapin in Wellfleet Harbor for the 2001 season.  At 4:30 P.M., a researcher found tracks that led from the high tide water edge on Lieutenant Island’s north beach up to and over the dune known as Turtle Pass.  A search of the island by the Paludal Posse discovered a female terrapin crawling down slope along a dirt road leading from the island’s northwest high point.  She was dust covered and had already deposited her eggs somewhere upland of the spot she was found.  Terrapin 1106 is approximately 14 years old, 17.2 centimeters long, and weighs 824 grams.  With her appearance as a benchmark, we can anticipate nesting to escalate until it crescendos during the last week of June, then taper off just as gradually until ending in late July.  As witnessed by the multiple tracks she crossed en route from her nesting site, she and her sisters take on quite a risk when they come ashore.