Leatherback
Turtles in Cornwall
Also
known as leathery turtle and luth.People in the UK imagine that turtles
live elsewhere, but in fact leatherbacks are clearly a part of the fauna
of the Celtic Sea. We may even have an important summer concentration
just off the edge of our continental shelf.

Leatherback turtle
photograph by Jayne Herbert
The
leatherback is the largest living turtle. Among the seven or eight species
of sea turtle it is the most pelagic, swims fastest and dives deepest.
The weight normally ranges from 200 to 700kg. The largest leatherback
ever recorded was a male of 914kg and 2.6m length that stranded on the
west coast of Wales in 1988. The distinctive carapace has a rubber-like
texture, is about 4cm thick and is made primarily of tough, oil-saturated
connective tissue. The front flippers are proportionally longer than in
any other sea turtle, and may span 2.7m.
The
core body temperature of adults in cold water can be up to 18 degrees
C above the surrounding water. The turtles can rest submerged for two
hours, and can dive to 4,000 feet.
Leatherback
turtles feed on jellyfish, comb jellies and pelagic tunicates. They are
immune to coelenterate toxins. Their success in feeding on food of such
low energy density may be due in part to their ability to find deep-water
jellyfish very efficiently from their bioluminescence.
All
sea turtles lay their eggs in nests dug in open, sandy, tropical beaches.
Leatherbacks differ from other sea turtles in their low beach fidelity,
which hampers population estimation. Age at sexual maturity is unknown.
Small turtles are rarely seen after they have left the beaches and their
habitat is unknown.
The
leatherback ranges as far as the Arctic Circle. They are regularly seen
in the Celtic Sea, with occasional sightings from the coasts of Cornwall
and Devon and a long history of strandings. These have been documented
by Roger Penhallurick: 1988 was a peak year with 18 stranded, caught or
seen; similar numbers were reported in 1990. The record suggests some
correspondence between turtle and jellyfish numbers around Cornwall.
By-catches
in the tuna drift-net fishery by Cornish boats were estimated several
years ago at a rate of four per 1,000 km hours of net immersion. This
was a remarkably high figure, being about one fifth of the capture rate
of dolphins in the same nets, despite the fact that the slower movements
of turtles might be expected to put them at less risk. It suggested a
high density of turtles in the area of the fishery. This by-catch has
been one factor in the decision of the EU to close this fishery in 2001.
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