The Cumberland Island Museum has published Sea
Turtles of the Georgia Coast by Carol Ruckdeschel (Cumberland Island
Museum), C. Robert Shoop (University of Rhode Island), and George R. Zug
(National Museum of National History, Smithsonian Institution).
The 100-page book, available
from the Cumberland Island Museum for $12.95 per copy, includes
interesting life history details of sea turtles, including feeding habits
and other aspects of their biology. Much of the information presented is
in response to the many questions posed to the authors over the past few
years.
Written for the general public as well as the scientific
community, the text is amplified by numerous drawings and illustrations. A
16-page appendix provides detailed instruction on analyzing specimens to
differentiate between species.
The book describes the five species found in the Western North
Atlantic: Leatherback, Loggerhead, Kemp's ridley, Green sea turtle, and
Hawksbill. Leatherbacks and green sea turtles deposit occasional clutches
of eggs in Georgia, but only the Loggerhead nests there regularly. The
authors present details of nesting behavior, egg sizes and numbers, and
other aspects.
Readers will also learn about problems sea turtles face in
Georgia and along the East Coast of the U.S. With diminishing nesting
habitat, altered foraging habitat, considerable mortality from commercial
fisheries, and hungry feral swine as egg predators, our sea turtles face
daunting challenges.
The book provides keys to species identification. Dichotomous keys to
turtles both live and dead, intact or partial carcasses, and to certain
bones and skulls of all five local species enable the reader to identify
any species found in Georgia. Sketches are provided to help clarify
distinctions.
The book is the first in the Museum's Occasional Publications Series,
designed to provide information to the public and scholars on subjects
related to Museum activities, Cumberland Island, and the nearby coastal
area.
Order
your copy from the Cumberland Island Museum.
Thanks to the Savannah
Presbytery for providing a grant to the Museum to help with
distributing the sea turtle book free to schools and libraries along the
coast.
All sea turtles are on the Endangered Species List and are
protected by law. Readers are encouraged to report any sightings of dead animals to the state Department of Natural Resources. |