Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Classification specs:                                                               

The Green Sea Turtle
Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata (vertebrates)

Class: Reptilia (Reptiles)

Order: Chelonia (turtles and tortoises

Family: Cheloniidae (true turtles)

Genus: Chelonia                                                   

Species: Mydas




Structure and shape of turtle
Structural and behavioural adaptations:                                          



There are actually very few structural adaptations to these creatures:



· Due to the fact that their neck and limbs cannot retract without assistance, a shell is provided thus to support retract ability.

· The forelimbs are designed into long, paddle-like flippers for swimming.                                       

However these marvellous reptiles have very fascinating behavioural adaptations!

· Green sea turtles have 'salt glands' that assist in getting rid of excess salt from their bodies. Salt is excreted by what we might recognise as 'tears'. However, not from despair but in action of getting rid of too much salt!!

· The tears not also assist in avoiding excess salt, but eyes free of sand while out of the water.

· Thus the turtles feel extremely vulnerable while on sand, females are the most common gender to haul out of the water and lay eggs.

REALLY INTERESTING FACTS TO KNOW ABOUT THESE SPECIES:

· Green sea turtles can stay up to five hours inside the water to look for prey! This means; in between every heartbeat, there could be as long as nine minutes gap...


· Green sea turtles have particular bacteria in their stomach that assists them to break down sea grass/algae that is eaten. This is to let mature/adult ones live as herbivores. They attain this bacterium when young, from eating the parent's wastes!

Their diet:                                                                                    
These turtles also eat algae


When young, these exquisite turtles will tend to eat sponges, molluscs, jellyfish, fish and plankton, therefore being omnivores. However, as mentioned afore, sea grass and algae will be able to be eaten once attained the bacteria. Mature turtles only consume seagrass and algae, hence, becoming herbivores. Their jaws actually become adapted to a vegetarian diet! The types of sea grass may include as what will be known as ‘Turtle Grass’ and ‘Manatee Grass’.

Place in the Food Cycle:                                                 

Due to the fact that Sea turtles (in common) have only a very few predators such as sharks, the Green sea turtle would be counted to be as one of the most powerful, therefore, would be one of the last However, the young ones are extremely vulnerable; when sprinting towards the water, straight from hatching, anything from seagulls to other sea birds can scoop them up as food.                                                                

How they reproduce:                                                                                 


Sprinting for the Sea!
For this particular species, a turtle sexually matures to mate/ and reproduce at the ages around twenty to fifty years! Once mature, adults will tend to migrate from foraging grounds to nesting grounds.  Nesting is extremely peak within months June and July. Males visit the nesting grounds arrive once a year, while females turn up two to four years. Once mated, the female will continue on her own, until a few weeks, where she moves out of the water and into the sand to make a large nest for her hundred or so leathery eggs. She will lay them; carefully cover them in sand and off back into the water.

After two months of incubation, the eggs will hatch and as a team, young ones will dash off for the water to prevent themselves from predators. From then on, the hatchlings will defend themselves, out of danger.

ASTONISHING FACTS!!!! :

·         It is believed that the mother turtle will swim to her birthplace to lay her eggs!!

·         The gender of the yet to be hatched turtles depends on the temperature of the eggs while incubation! - Males usually hatch from lower temperatures while females hatch from higher temperatures!



Migration:

As enumerated before, migration of the Green Sea Turtles is mainly only used for reproduction, and then coming back to their nesting homes. Males visit nesting grounds once a year, while females visit every two to four years. Once Fertilisation is completed, mother turtle will go off shore to lay her eggs and off she will go back to her foraging grounds. This may take her 2,090 km too reach! This means going across oceans (Atlantic Ocean, etc.).

Habitat:

Green Sea turtles live in seas that do not fall below the temperature of twenty degrees Celsius, as they prefer warmer areas to the cold. This means they can live in Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans.

The distribution of Green Sea Turtles world-wide
Risks to their survival:

Though there aren’t any predators for these huge creatures apart from sharks, there are many man-kind and environmental threats to these harmless reptiles. Firstly, numerous countries tend to count sea turtles as a type of dish, including the Chelonia, mydas. It is considered that hatchlings can only find their way to the sea with the reflection of light from the ocean. However, due to artificial lighting around beaches from buildings and streets, many hatchlings seem to be lead to the incorrect paths, and suffer harmful deaths from seagulls to larger birds as their predators. Secondly, when ‘nourishing the beach’, much sand is released into the beach. This can be extremely difficult for newborn turtles to finding their way out from their loaded nests, leading to death in this instance too. There are many other ways turtles are being killed unintentionally and also intentionally by humans. As mentioned before, Environmental causes seem to take part too, like erosion of beaches for example, cause inconvenience to the habitats of these species.



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You have reached the end of my research blog!

I  HOPE EVERYONE HAS HAD FUN READING IT!
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Bibliography

n.a, April 18th 2012, SEA TURTLES, http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/info-books/sea-turtle/adaptations.htmm, April 18th 2012

Obxtank,2009,Yahoo!answers,=http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090310161357AAesXut, last viewed April 18th 2012.

n.a, 2012, What do green sea turtles eat?, http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_do_Green_Sea_Turtles_eat, last visited April 19th 2012

Harrison, 2004, The kid’s times: Green Sea Turtles, http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/education/kids_times_turtle_green.pdf, last visited April 19th 2012

Terranss, 2006, Where does the turtle stand in the food web?, http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=1006033016703, last visited April 19th 2012

n.a, n.d, Green Sea Turtle, http://www.allthesea.com/Green-Sea-Turtles.html, last visited April 19th 2012

n.a, n.d, Green Sea Turtles, Chelonia mydas, http://marinebio.org/species.asp?id=51, last visited April 21st 2012

na, 05/02/2012, Threats to Marine Turtles, http://www.turtles.org/threats.htm, last visited April 22nd 2012