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Relocating marine turtle eggs in Kenya 🐢

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Jon, did you know that marine turtles lay their eggs on land? They don’t lay them underwater as the embryos breathe through a membrane and would drown. When laying their eggs, marine turtles can sometimes choose risky spots for their nests - where the eggs could be preyed on by wildlife, taken by poachers or flooded by high tides.

To help combat this in Kenya, as part of our marine turtle monitoring programme, we sometimes carefully relocate turtle nests to make sure the eggs are safe. 
Egg relocation
EASY DOES IT
Relocating a nest takes skill and patience and we have protocols we follow to minimise the risk. One egg is moved at a time and all eggs are arranged in the same pattern as they were laid. Then the eggs are surrounded by sand from the original nest.

Nesting females secrete a special fluid, which stops bacteria from infecting the eggs, so using the same sand is really important. Marine turtles don’t check on the eggs once they’ve been laid so moving the nest doesn’t create a problem. 
Success
Turtle
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Turtles are killed for their shells, meat and body parts. And with only around one in every 1,000 marine turtles making it to adulthood, every turtle counts!

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Photos and graphics © used with permission. Sea turtle, video © Shutterstock | Egg relocation, image © Jonathan Caramanus, Green Renaissance, WWF-UK | Turtle, image © Antonio Busiello, WWF-US

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