Dead Turtle

Discussion in 'Mid Atlantic' started by gmulaxman, Sep 22, 2011.

  1. gmulaxman

    gmulaxman New Member

    3
    Oct 11, 2007
    So, this thing scared the hell outta me yesterday, until it washed ashore and I realized it was dead. It was about 5' long. Anyone know what kinda turtle it it?:confused:
     

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  2. gruvi

    gruvi Well-Known Member

    382
    Sep 13, 2011
    Sea turtle. Poor thing :( Did anyone move it? The skull and shell are typically cleaned and people collect them, and they are kinda valuable.
     

  3. Gfootr

    Gfootr Well-Known Member

    538
    Dec 26, 2009
    I'd go with Loggerhead or maybe Kemp's Ridley, hard to tell color. Nothing VALUABLE here except to DO SOMETHING to make sure our oceans don't die. If we each do a little, it adds up to a lot. I pick up trash (especially plastic) after every session.
     
  4. Chris Joyner

    Chris Joyner Moderator

    690
    May 23, 2006
    Is it the angle or did something take a bite out of the back tail area?
     
  5. Feesh

    Feesh Well-Known Member

    197
    Jun 5, 2008
    Ditto, I cant tell you how many times (especially summer) where something blows into the ocean and I (not the person who let it fly away) runs after and gets it, or grab stuff in the ocean and tuck it in my wetsuit. Everyone must contribute!
     
  6. Masterjasson

    Masterjasson Well-Known Member

    167
    Mar 8, 2010
    Poacher kook.
     
  7. gmulaxman

    gmulaxman New Member

    3
    Oct 11, 2007
    I think it was just the angle. But i'm obviously not a turtle expert.
     
  8. joenottoast

    joenottoast Well-Known Member

    117
    Jul 27, 2011
    see dead turtle, whose death had nothing to do with you --> mention keeping it --> chinese son-of-a-bish status
     
  9. johhnyutah

    johhnyutah Well-Known Member

    241
    Aug 6, 2009
    looks like a loggerhead. while getting plastic out of the ocean his highly honorable ( I do it every session) our oceans are being stripped of life. Almost all fish species that people like to eat have been over-fished, and when one species is gone we move on to the next. Maybe you have been to restaurants that serve Chilean Seabass. The fish is actually called Patagonian toothfish. They are deepwater fish and slow to reproduce. Average catch size has dropped from 60-80 lbs to 20-25 lbs. When you take the spawning fish out of a population it inevitably crashes the species.
     
  10. nickzilla720

    nickzilla720 Well-Known Member

    142
    Jul 28, 2008
    DITTO AND DITTO! Chest zip wetsuits are the best for tucking the trash away!
     
  11. cml

    cml New Member

    3
    Mar 6, 2011
    Hi! Where is this located? It is very important that you report this find. I am a marine biologist and am familiar with the issues facing Kemp's Ridley and other sea turtle species. The Kemp's Ridley is protected under a number of endangered species acts. It is unlawful to possess the shell or skull without properly notifying authorities first. Learn more about it here: http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/turtles/kempsridley.htm Since the body appears to be relatively intact, I imagine they would have a better chance of identifying the cause of death and other important biological data.
     
  12. Erock

    Erock Well-Known Member

    Aug 6, 2011
    Let me further qualify your statement Johnny
    The US is at the forefront of fishery conservation on the global scale. We made plenty of mistakes in the past, still are making some today. However, we, unlike many other countries globally, have learned from our mistakes. We are now OVER-regulated in many areas thanks to the current makeup of NOAA and NMFS bureaucrats. We have massive stocks of many popular species in our waters now that continue to build at a very healthy rate
    Here's the problem on a global scale: The UN (which we fund more than all the other members combined) requires the US to also abide by it's global fishing treaties. But guess what, the UN does not require any other member country to abide by the treaties in so far as they just turn a blind eye. Your example of the "chilean seabass" being perfect. That fishery is fished mainly by European and Asian industrial fishing fleets. Atlantic Bluefin Tuna are another great example. The UN turns a blind eye to the overfishing occurring in Asian waters and, even worse, they do nothing about the Mediterranean net fishery for the juvenile, pre-brooding stock because most North African countries are considered "developing" which pretty much means they can do what they want. Anyway, long story short, the US does more than it's part in protecting our ocean wildlife.

    As far as the turtle, probably a loggerhead. And at 5' in length, more than likely a very old one that probably died of old age.
     
  13. wet suit = no tourists

    wet suit = no tourists Well-Known Member

    64
    Sep 10, 2010
    If he had only learned to stayabovetheweather life could have been gruvi.
     
  14. johhnyutah

    johhnyutah Well-Known Member

    241
    Aug 6, 2009
    Erock, appreciate the clarification. I would agree that there are examples of fisheries in the US being regulated appropriately, some that are being "over" regulated from a commercial fisherman's position. The lobster fishery in Maine is an example where the state decided, many years ago to protect females by notching the tails of egg bearing females. Maine's fishery remains highly productive while other states' are not. In Maryland, we just started (several years ago) prohibiting the catch of female crabs by recreational anglers) and the crab populations have been recovering nicely. The Atlantic Menhaden fishery has been mismanaged for years, with undo weight being given to one company and their purse seine fishery. It appears ASMFC is poised to reduce the quota for the first time in history. Pelagic fish that roam the oceans are overfished because of the extreme difficulty in International management agreements, and enforcement. I was in Korea several years ago and eating seafood with a number of Koreans. A plate of very small fish (like 3-4") was placed on the table and I was fascinated by them. I looked closely and realized that they were baby Croaker, couldn't believe they were serving such tiny fish in a restaurant when in 3 years they would provide so much more.
     
  15. johhnyutah

    johhnyutah Well-Known Member

    241
    Aug 6, 2009
    good 411 cml, where do you work? A necropsy would provide scientists with some good info.
     
  16. ripthegnar

    ripthegnar Well-Known Member

    94
    Aug 24, 2010
    not really sure what turtle it is, but i hope it died of old age and not an environmental hazard
     
  17. dave

    dave Well-Known Member

    448
    Dec 11, 2008
    maybe it lived a full life, laid many eggs and just died of old age
     
  18. OCSURF

    OCSURF Member

    5
    May 4, 2011
    I dont think it could bare to live in the same waters as Gruvi, commitied suicide... poor guy I feel your pain
     
  19. ND081

    ND081 Well-Known Member

    900
    Aug 7, 2010
    i've seen some pretty weird/scary stuff wash up on the beach, but never a sea turtle. i've been in the water with turtles that were alive for (lack of a better word) in south carolina and puerto rico, but never seen one this far north. i wonder what it was doing up here