Washington, December 24 (ANI): A new research project launched by the University of Exeter, UK, is tracking the journeys of two marine turtles around the world's oceans.
Noelle and Darwinia are two adult female leatherback turtles that nest in Gabon, Western Central Africa.
The research team has fitted each turtle with a small satellite tracking device, which enables the scientists to monitor their precise movements and observe where and how deep they dive.
The tracking began on 7 December 2009 and so far the turtles have travelled 800 miles between them.
Noelle and Darwinia are members of the world's largest nesting population of leatherback turtles, but their environment is threatened.
The waters around Gabon are increasingly subject to industrial fishing and oil exploitation, particularly from nations outside West Africa, including countries in Europe.
Leatherbacks are of profound conservation concern around the world after populations in the Indo-Pacific crashed by more than 90 percent in the 1980s and 1990s.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists leatherback turtles as critically endangered globally, but detailed population assessments in much of the Atlantic, especially Africa, are lacking.
A team from the University of Exeter, the Government of Gabon and a network of NGO's in country, including the Wildlife Conservation Society and Seaturtle.org, is now undertaking research to learn where these creatures go.
The researchers hope their findings will enable government agencies to protect key areas from the impacts of fishing, oil exploitation and pollution.
According to Dr Matthew Witt of the University of Exeter, a member of the project team, "We are building a high precision model of how these amazing creatures use the seas near Gabon to breed."
"Our aim is that this will help inform management of fisheries and mineral exploration as well as feeding into ambitious plans to widen the network of marine protected areas in Gabon," he said.
"It is only by having detailed information on where these creatures go that we can try to protect them," he added.
"Sea turtles are the ancient mariners of the world," said Dr Howard Rosenbaum, Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Ocean Giants Program.
"Understanding broader migration patterns and use of the nearshore habitat around their nesting beaches is a key component to their conservation," he added. (ANI)
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