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Saving the Sea Turtles

Sea Turtle Specialists Monitor Populations of the Species to Protect Them From Extinction

May 1, 2011

Sea turtle specialists are monitoring populations of the endangered species to see how they are faring and how experts can protect them from threats. Because temperature can affect the gender of the developing turtle in an egg, researchers are studying the effect of climate change on the species. The hotter than sand, the more likely the turtle will be female. Experts are rehabilitating sick and injured turtles that fall victim to tumors and disease from pollutants and sewage to help raise chances of survival.

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Science Insider

ENDANGERED SPECIES: Any species which is in danger of becoming extinct, or dying out entirely. A species can become endangered from being few in numbers or being threatened by a changing environment or increase in predation.

WHAT IS EXTINCTION: Animal populations are all classified by biologists down to groups capable of reproducing fertile offspring (as well as bigger groups of classifications, such as a genus or family). When no more individuals of a species can be found anywhere on earth, the species is considered extinct. Many animals have been as added to the endangered species list because their populations are close to becoming extinct. If one animal relies on an endangered animal for its food or protection, it too can become part of the extinction chain. Possibly the most famous extinction happened at the end of the Cretaceous period, about 65 million years ago, when most of the species on Earth were wiped out after a large asteroid's impact with the Earth. That was when all the non-bird-like dinosaurs went extinct.

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Boca Raton Sea Turtle Program


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