Sri Lanka marks YoT with new marine sanctuary
http://www.ioseaturtles.org/yot2006/feature_detail.php?id=138
On 6 August 2006, Sri Lanka will commemorate the Year of the Turtle 2006
with an official declaration of Sri Lanka's first marine turtle sanctuary
and satellite tracking program in Rekawa.
The Turtle Conservation Project (TCP), in collaboration with the Department
of Wildlife Conservation, is organizing various events to commemorate the
"Year of the Turtle". Among these events, official declaration of Rekawa
Sanctuary for marine turtle conservation and releasing of sea turtles with
satellite transmitters are the two priority events that will contribute
towards the conservation efforts of sea turtle conservation in Sri Lanka.
The official ceremony of the declaration of Sri Lanka's first Wildlife
Sanctuary for marine turtles and the Country's First Marine Turtle Satellite
Tracking Programme will be held on the 6th of August at 7.30 a.m at Rekawa
TCP office by the participation of the Honorable Minister of Agricultural
Development Mr. Chamal Rajapakshe.
SEA TURTLE SATELLITE TRACKING IN SRI LANKA
This project aims to reveal for the first time the inter-nesting habitat,
post-nesting migratory routes and foraging grounds of adult female green
turtles (Chelonia mydas) nesting in Sri Lanka.
This will be achieved by attaching 6 Sirtrak satellite transmitters to the
carapaces of the female green turtles shortly after they have nested at the
Rekawa rookery in conjunction with the TCP's flipper-tagging and genetic
sampling studies at the Rekawa project site. The turtles will then be
tracked via the Argos satellite system for an anticipated average of 10
months per animal. Through analysis of the data generated by the tags, this
project will provide a valuable insight into the ecology of Sri Lanka's
green turtles throughout their range and will be critical to understanding
and addressing potential local threats at sea, as well as the impacts of
incidental catch in regional high seas fisheries and coastal fisheries in
other areas of their range.
This project involves collaborations between groups from 3 different
continents and is designed to foster international relations and facilitate
the exchange of highly specialised skills. As such, capacity building is an
essential and integral part of this project. The Marine Turtle Research
Group staffs are highly experienced in the attachment and processing of
satellite transmitters and telemetry data. This project will involve
in-field training to Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWLC) officers;
TCP officers and other interested parties so that they may continue the
project into the future.
The project will be filmed by the BBC Natural History Unit to be the main
feature of a 30-minute documentary that will feature in a new BBC series.
The series will feature successful conservation projects around the world
and will be broadcast in September 2007. Once tagged, the real-time tracking
maps of the turtles' journeys will be available live at
www.seaturtle.org/tracking to anyone with internet access around the world.
A dedicated international press strategy will link this pioneering online
facility to the BBC documentary thereby raising national and international
awareness of the plight of Sri Lanka's endangered marine turtles.
Source:
Thushan Kapurusinghe
Project Leader - TCP Sri Lanka