Civil Beat photographer Kevin Fujii was on hand to document emerging life on the East Oahu beach earlier this week.
It’s been nine years since the last recorded green sea turtle nest was discovered on the famous body and boogie boarding, spine-crushing Sandy Beach.
This year six potential chambers of eggs with dozens of hatchlings were found and protected by Malama No Honu volunteers, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service scientists and community members.
Sandy Beach Park onlookers Monday witnessed some of the honu hatchlings rescue and release. The educational experience emphasized the threatened species challenging life made more difficult by human impacts.
Approximately 75% of the honu eggs hatched at Sandy Beach. “That鈥檚 about average or maybe a little bit below average of what we see elsewhere on Oahu,” U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Pacific Islands Coastal Program biologist Sheldon Plentovich says.
After a plea from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Malama No Honu, the City and County of Honolulu turned off lights to make it easier for the hatchlings to find the ocean.
Plentovich said at least two hatchings were disoriented by the parking lot lights. “We followed their tracks to the parking lot and far down the beach. Although two of the six hatchlings were found by the trash cans and were released into the ocean, they were lethargic and likely died. The other disoriented (by artificial lights) hatchlings were not recovered.”
Biologists also found 61 hatchlings entangled in fishing line and trapped in the nest that the other six baby turtles had come out of.
“They would have died without intervention,” Plentovich said. “Our team was able to disentangle them so that they could walk into the ocean.”
After all the hatchlings emerge, biologists examine the unhatched eggs. They can tell by how the egg looks and feels if there is a live hatchling inside.
鈥淯nhatched eggs are examined to determine the stage of development,” Plentovich said. “This helps biologists better understand when something went wrong.”
Honu nesting season runs between April and November. After eggs are laid, incubation lasts about 50 days.
Plentovich said this year there are 27 documented nests on Oahu so far, about three-fourths of the way through the hatching season.
She expects there will end up being between 35 and 45 nests total. But about half end up being what biologists call “false crawls,” where the female turtle didn’t lay any eggs because she was just checking out the area or something disturbed her so she headed back to the ocean.
“One honu can lay four to eight nests each year,” Plentovich said. “The nests at Sandy Beach could have been made by one honu.”
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