Th e
hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata) is a critically endangered sea
turtle belonging to the family Cheloniidae. It is the only species in
its genus. The species has a worldwide distribution, with Atlantic and
Pacific subspecies. Eretmochelys imbricata imbricata is the Atlantic
subspecies, while Eretmochelys imbricata bissa is found in the
Indo-Pacific region.
The hawksbill's appearance is similar to that of other marine
turtles. It has a generally flattened body shape, a protective carapace,
and its flipper-like arms are adapted for swimming in the open ocean. E.
imbricata is easily distinguished from other sea turtles by its sharp,
curving beak with prominent tomium, and the saw-like appearance of its
shell margins. While the turtle lives a part of its life in the open
ocean, it is most often encountered in shallow lagoons and coral reefs
where it feeds on its chosen prey, sea sponges. Some of the sponges
eaten by E. imbricata are known to be highly toxic and lethal when eaten
by other organisms. In addition, the sponges that hawksbills eat are
usually those with high silica content, making the turtles one of few
animals capable of eating siliceous organisms. They also feed on other
invertebrates, such as comb jellies and jellyfish.
Because of human fishing practices, Eretmochelys imbricata
populations around the world are threatened with extinction and the
turtle has been classified as critically endangered by the World
Conservation Union.[1] Several countries, such as China and Japan, have
valued hunting hawksbill turtles for their flesh, which is considered
good eating. Hawksbill turtle shells are the primary source of tortoise
shell material, used for decorative purposes. By the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species, it is illegal to capture and
to trade in hawksbill turtles and products derived from them in many
nations. Eretmochelys imbricata has the typical appearance of a marine
turtle. Like the other members of its family, it has a depressed body
form and flipper-like limbs adapted for swimming. Adult hawksbill
turtles have been known to grow up to a metre (3.3 feet) in length,
weighing around 80 kilograms (176 lbs) on average. The heaviest
hawksbill ever captured was measured to be 127 kilograms. The turtle's
shell, or carapace, has an amber background patterned with an irregular
combination of light and dark streaks, with predominantly black and
mottled brown colors radiating to the sides.The hawksbill turtle has
several characteristics that distinguish it from other, closely related
species. Its elongated, tapered head ends in a beak-like mouth (from
which its common name is derived), its beak more sharply pronounced and
hooked than other sea turtles. The hawksbill's arms have two visible
claws on each flipper.
One of the hawksbill's more-easily distinguished characteristics is
the pattern of the thick scutes that make up its carapace. While its
carapace has five central scutes and four pairs of lateral scutes like
several members of the same family, E. imbricata's posterior scutes
overlap in such a way as to give the rear margin of its carapace a
serrated look, similar to the edge of a saw or a steak knife. The
turtle's carapace itself has been known to reach almost a meter in
length.
The sand tracks of hawksbill turtles are asymmetrical, as they crawl
on land with an alternating gait. This is opposed to the green sea
turtle and the leatherback turtle, which crawl rather symmetrically.
Due to its consumption of venomous cnidarians hawksbill turtle flesh
can reach certain levels of toxicity.
Distribution
Hawksbill turtles have a wide range, found predominantly in tropical
reefs of the Indian, Pacific and Atlantic oceans. Of all the sea turtle
species, E. imbricata is the one most associated with tropical waters.
Two major subpopulations are acknowledged to exist, the Atlantic and
Indo-Pacific subpopulations.
Indo-Pacific subpopulation
The species' Indo-Pacific population is widespread throughout the
entire region. In the Indian Ocean, hawksbills are a common sight all
along the east coast of the African continent, including the seas
surrounding Madagascar and nearby island groups. The species' Indian
Ocean range stretches all the way along the coast of Asia, including the
Persian Gulf and the Red Sea, along the entire coast of the Indian
subcontinent, across the entire Indonesian archipelago and the
northwestern coast of Australia. The Pacific range of E. imbricata is
somewhat limited to the ocean's tropical and subtropical regions. Its
northernmost reach in the region are the waters off the southwestern tip
of the Korean peninsula and the Japanese archipelago. The range
continues, enveloping the entire region of Southeast Asia, the entire
northern coast of Australia all the way south to the northern part of
New Zealand. Across the Pacific, hawksbills are known as far north as
the Baja peninsula in Mexico, along the waters off the Central American
and South American coast to the northern tip of Chile.In the
Philippines, there are several known nesting sites for the species.
Hawksbill turtle hatchlings have been found on the island of Boracay.A
small group of islands in the southwest of the archipelago have been
named the "Turtle Islands" precisely because they are known nesting
grounds for two species of sea turtle, including Eretmochelys imbricata.
(The other being Chelonia mydas, the green turtle.) In Australia, E.
imbricata are known to nest on Milman Island in the Great Barrier
Reef.In the Indian Ocean, hawksbill turtles have been found to nest as
far west as Cousine Island in the Seychelles, where the species has been
legally protected since 1994. The Seychelles' inner islands and islets,
such as Aldabra Island, are ripe feeding grounds for immature
hawksbills.
Habitat
Adult hawksbill turtles are primarily found in tropical coral reefs.
They are usually seen resting in caves and ledges in and around these
reefs, throughout the day. As a highly migratory species, they have also
been encountered in a wide range of habitats, from the open ocean to
lagoons and even mangrove swamps in estuaries. While much is not known
about the habitat preferences of early-life stage E. imbricata, like
other sea turtles' young, they are assumed to be completely pelagic and
thus make the open sea their home until they mature.
Feeding ecology
While they are known to be omnivorous, the principal food of hawkbill
turtles are sponges. Sponges constitute 70 – 95% of the diets of E.
imbricata populations in the Caribbean. However like many spongivores,
E. imbricata feed only on a few select species, and will ignore many
others. The Caribbean hawksbill populations were found to feed primarily
on sponges from the class Demospongiae, specifically ones belonging to
the orders Astrophorida, Spirophorida and Hadromerida.Select sponge
species known to be fed on by these turtles include Geodia gibberosa.
Aside from sponges, hawksbills also feed on algae and cnidarians like
jellyfish and sea anemones.The hawksbill is also known to feed on the
dangerous jellyfish-like hydrozoan, the Portuguese Man o' War (Physalia
physalis). Hawksbills close their unprotected eyes when they feed on
these cnidarians, for Man o' War's stinging cells cannot penetrate the
turtles' armoured heads.
Eretmochelys imbricata have shown themselves to be highly resilient
and resistant to their prey. Some of the sponges known to be eaten by
hawksbills, such as Aaptos aaptos, Chondrilla nucula, Tethya actinia,
Spheciospongia vesparium and Suberites domuncula, are highly (often
lethally) toxic to other organisms. In addition, hawksbills are known to
choose sponge species that have a significant amount of siliceous
spicules, such as Ancorina, Geodia, Ecionemia and Placospongia.
Life history
Much is not known about the life history of Eretmochelys imbricata.
Hawksbills are known to mate biyearly in secluded lagoons in remote
islands throughout their range. Mating season for Atlantic hawksbills
usually takes place from April to November. For Indian Ocean populations
such as the Seychelles hawksbill population, the mating season is from
September to February. As with other sea turtles, hawksbills mate in
shallow lagoons off the shores of their prospective nesting beaches.
After mating, the females drag their heavy bodies high onto the beach
during the night. They will then clear out an area and dig a nesting
hole using their rear flippers. The female then lays a clutch of eggs in
the nest and then covers them with sand. Caribbean and Florida nests of
E. imbricata normally contain around 140 eggs. After the
several-hour-long process, the female then returns to the sea. This is
the only time when hawksbill turtles are known to leave the ocean.
The baby turtles, usually weighing less than two dozen grams, hatch
during the night after around two months. These newly emergent
hatchlings are dark-colored, with heart-shaped carapaces measuring
around 2.5 centimetres (1 in) long. They instinctually head for the sea,
attracted by the reflection of the moon on the water (a mechanism which
can be disrupted by anthropogenic light sources such as street lamps and
lights). While they emerge under the cover of darkness, baby turtles
that do not reach the water by daybreak are preyed upon by predators
such as shorebirds and shore crabs.
The early life history of juvenile hawksbill turtles is unknown. Upon
reaching the sea, the hatchlings are assumed to enter a pelagic life
stage (like other marine turtles) for an undetermined amount of time.
While hawksbill turtle growth rates are not known, when E. imbricata
juveniles reach around 35 cm, they switch from a pelagic life style to a
coral reef-associated one. Hawksbill turtles are hypothesized to reach
maturity after thirty years.
While there is no clear consensus because of a lack of data,
hawksbill turtles are believed to live from thirty to fifty years in the
wild. Like other sea turtles, hawksbill turtles are solitary for most of
their lives, they only group together to mate. They were once thought to
be habitual, but they are now known to be highly migratory. Because of
their tough carapaces, hawksbill turtles have no major predators as
there are few creatures that are capable of biting through their
protective shell. Sharks and estuarine crocodiles are a few of their
natural predators. Octopuses and some species of pelagic fish have also
been known to prey on the adult turtles.
Evolutionary history
Within the sea turtles, Eretmochelys imbricata has several unique
anatomical and ecological traits, including being the only primarily
spongivorous reptile known. Because of this, its evolutionary position
has been somewhat unclear. Molecular analyses supports the probability
that the Eretmochelydae evolved from carnivorous ancestors rather than
herbivorous ones. As the taxonomic tribe Carettini is composed of
carnivorous species (such as the loggerhead turtle), the hawksbill most
probably evolved from them instead of the herbivorous Chelonini, which
includes the green turtle.
Etymology and taxonomic history
The hawksbill turtle was originally described by Carolus Linnaeus as
Testudo imbricata in 1766.It was moved into the genus Eretmochelys by
the Austrian zoologist Leopold Fitzinger in 1843. In 1857, the species
was redescribed as Eretmochelys imbricata squamata, a designation that
is now invalid.
There are two accepted subspecies in the E. imbricata taxon.
Eretmochelys imbricata bissa (Rüppell, 1835) refers to all known
populations of the Eretmochelys imbricata that reside in the Pacific
Ocean. The Atlantic population has been found to be a separate
subspecies, Eretmochelys imbricata imbricata (Linnaeus, 1766). The
subspecies name of imbricata was retained because the type specimen that
Linnaeus used to initially describe the species was from the Atlantic.
Fitzinger derived the genus' name, Eretmochelys from the Greek roots
eretmo and chelys, corresponding to "oar" and "turtle" respectively. The
name refers to the turtles' oar-like front flippers. The species' name
imbricata is Latin, corresponding to the English term imbricate. This
appropriately describes the turtles' overlapping posterior scutes. The
Pacific hawksbill's subspecies name, bissa is Latin for "double". The
subspecies was originally described as Caretta bissa and the term
referred to the then-species' being the second species in the genus.
Caretta is the genus of the hawksbill's much larger relative, the
loggerhead turtle.
Importance to humans
Throughout the world, hawksbill turtles are taken by humans even
though it is illegal to hunt them in many countries. In some parts of
the world, hawksbill turtles are taken and eaten as a delicacy. As far
back as the fifth century B.C., sea turtles including the hawksbill were
eaten as delicacies in China.
Many cultures also use the turtles' shells for decoration. In China
where it was known as tai mei, it is called the tortoise-shell turtle,
named primarily for its shell which was used for decoration. In Japan,
the turtles are also harvested for their shell scutes, which are called
bekko in the local Nihongo. It is used in various personal implements,
such as eyeglass frames. In 1994, Japan stopped importing hawksbill
shells from other nations. Prior to this, the Japanese hawksbill shell
trade was around 30,000 kilograms of raw shells per year. In the west,
hawksbill turtle shells have been harvested by the ancient Greeks and
ancient Romans for jewelry, such as combs, brushes and rings. A bulk of
the world's hawksbill turtle shell trade is harvested from the
Caribbean. In 2006, it was found that processed shells of the turtles
are regularly available, often in large amounts in countries in the
region, including the Dominican Republic and Colombia.
The hawksbill turtle is depicted on the reverse side of the
20-Venezuelan bolívar and the 2-Brazilian Reais banknotes. A
much-beloved fountain sculpture of a boy riding a hawksbill
affectionately known as Turtle Boy stands in Worcester, Massachusetts.
[edit] Conservation
General consensus has determined sea turtles, including Eretmochelys
imbricata to be at the very least, threatened species because of their
long lifespans, slow growth and maturity, and slow reproductive rates.
Many adult turtles have been killed by humans both deliberately and
incidentally. In addition, the nesting sites of the turtles are also
threatened by human and animal encroachment. Small mammals have been
known to raid the nesting sites and dig up the turtles' eggs.[6] In the
U.S. Virgin Islands, Eretmochelys imbricata nests (along with the nests
of other sea turtles like Dermochelys coriacea) are often raided by
mongooses right after being laid.
In 1996, the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species classified
Eretmochelys imbricata as critically endangered. Its status as an
endangered species was challenged prior to this, with two petitions
claiming that the turtle (along with three other species) had several
significant stable populations worldwide. These petitions were rejected
by the IUCN based on their analysis of data submitted by the Marine
Turtle Specialist Group (MTSG). The data given by the MTSG showed that
the worldwide population of hawksbill turtles had been reduced by 80% in
the last three of the species' generations, and that was no significant
increase in the turtles' populations as of 1996. In light of this data,
the IUCN applied the critically endangered (A1) status upon the species.
CR A2 status was denied however, because the IUCN believed that there
was insufficient data to show that the population of hawksbill turtles
were due to decrease by a further 80% in the future.
Historically, Eretmochelys imbricata was first listed as endangered
by the IUCN in 1982.This endangered status continued all the way through
several reassessments in 1986, 1988, 1990 and 1994 until it was upgraded
in status to critically endangered in 1996 (see above).
The species (along with the entire family Cheloniidae) has been
listed on Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species. It is illegal to import or export turtle products,
kill, capture or harass hawksbill turtles.
Local involvement in the conservation efforts for the species have
also increased in the past few years. The United States Fish and
Wildlife Service has classified the hawksbill turtle as endangered since
1970. The U.S. government has several recovery plans in place for
protecting its populations of E. imbricata. |