Green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas)
Taxonomy:
Listing Status: and
General Information
The green sea turtle grows to a maximum size of about 4 feet and a weight of 440 pounds. It has a heart-shaped shell, small head, and single-clawed flippers. Color is variable. Hatchlings generally have a black carapace, white plastron, and white margins on the shell and limbs. The adult carapace is smooth, keelless, and light to dark brown with dark mottling; the plastron is whitish to light yellow. Adult heads are light brown with yellow markings. Identifying characteristics include four pairs of costal scutes, none of which borders the nuchal scute, and only one pair of prefrontal scales between the eyes.
Population detail
The FWS is currently monitoring the following populations of the Green sea turtle
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Population location: Central West Pacific DPS
Listing status: Endangered
- States/US Territories in which this population is known to or is believed to occur: Guam , Northern Mariana Islands , Palau
- US Counties in which this population is known to or is believed to occur: View All
- Countries in which the this population is known to occur: Federated States of Micronesia, Marshall Islands, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands
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Population location: Central South Pacific DPS
Listing status: Endangered
- States/US Territories in which this population is known to or is believed to occur: American Samoa
- US Counties in which this population is known to or is believed to occur: View All
- Countries in which the this population is known to occur: Cook Islands, Fiji, French Polynesia, Kiribati, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu
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Population location: Mediterranean DPS
Listing status: Endangered
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Population location: East Indian-West Pacific DPS
Listing status: Threatened
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Population location: South Atlantic DPS
Listing status: Threatened
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Population location: North Atlantic DPS
Listing status: Threatened
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Population location: East Pacific DPS
Listing status: Threatened
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Population location: Central North Pacific DPS
Listing status: Threatened
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Population location: North Indian DPS
Listing status: Threatened
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Population location: Southwest Pacific DPS
Listing status: Threatened
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Population location: Southwest Indian DPS
Listing status: Threatened
Status | Date Listed | Lead Region | Where Listed |
---|---|---|---|
2016-05-06 | Pacific Region (Region 1) | Central West Pacific DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Pacific Region (Region 1) | Central South Pacific DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Foreign (Headquarters) | Mediterranean DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Foreign (Headquarters) | East Indian-West Pacific DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Southeast Region (Region 4) | South Atlantic DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Southeast Region (Region 4) | North Atlantic DPS | |
2016-05-06 | California/Nevada Region (Region 8) | East Pacific DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Pacific Region (Region 1) | Central North Pacific DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Foreign (Headquarters) | North Indian DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Foreign (Headquarters) | Southwest Pacific DPS | |
2016-05-06 | Foreign (Headquarters) | Southwest Indian DPS |
» Federal Register Documents
» Recovery
Date | Title | Plan Action Status | Plan Status |
---|---|---|---|
1991-10-29 | Recovery Plan for U.S. Population of Atlantic Green Turtle | View Implementation Progress | Final Revision 1 |
1998-01-12 | Recovery Plan for U.S. Pacific Populations of the Green Turtle | View Implementation Progress | Final Revision 1 |
1991-10-29 | Recovery Plan for U.S. Population of Atlantic Green Turtle | View Implementation Progress | Final Revision 1 |
1998-01-12 | Recovery Plan for U.S. Pacific Populations of the East Pacific Green Turtle | View Implementation Progress | Final Revision 1 |
Date | Title |
---|---|
2007-08-22 | Green sea turtle 5-yr review |
2007-08-22 | Green sea turtle 5-yr review |
» Critical Habitat
No critical habitat rules have been published for the Green sea turtle.
» Conservation Plans
» Petitions
» Life History
Habitat Requirements
Green turtles are generally found in fairly shallow waters (except when migrating) inside reefs, bays, and inlets. The turtles are attracted to lagoons and shoals with an abundance of marine grass and algae. Open beaches with a sloping platform and minimal disturbance are required for nesting. Green turtles apparently have a strong nesting site fidelity and often make long distance migrations between feeding grounds and nesting beaches. Hatchlings have been observed to seek refuge and food in Sargassum rafts.
Food Habits
Hatchling green turtles eat a variety of plants and animals, but adults feed almost exclusively on seagrasses and marine algae.
Movement / Home Range
The green turtle has a worldwide distribution in tropical and subtropical waters. Major green turtle nesting colonies in the Atlantic occur on Ascension Island, Aves Island, Costa Rica, and Surinam. Within the U.S., green turtles nest in small numbers in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina, and in larger numbers in Florida. The Florida green turtle nesting aggregation is recognized as a regionally significant colony. About 200 to 1,100 females are estimated to nest on beaches in the continental U.S. In the U.S. Pacific, over 90 percent of nesting throughout the Hawaiian archipelago occurs at the French Frigate Shoals, where about 200 to 700 females nest each year. Elsewhere in the U.S. Pacific, nesting takes place at scattered locations in the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas, Guam, and American Samoa. In the western Pacific, the largest green turtle nesting aggregation in the world occurs on Raine Island, Australia, where thousands of females nest nightly in an average nesting season. In the Indian Ocean, major nesting beaches occur in Oman where 6,000 to 20,000 females are reported to nest annually.
Reproductive Strategy
The nesting season varies with the locality. In the Southeastern U.S., it is roughly June through September. Nesting occurs nocturnally at 2, 3, or 4-year intervals. Only occasionally do females produce clutches in successive years. A female may lay as a many as nine clutches within a nesting season (overall average is about 3.3 nests per season) at about 13-day intervals. Clutch size varies from 75 to 200 eggs, with an average clutch size of 136 eggs reported for Florida. Incubation ranges from about 45 to 75 days, depending on incubation temperatures. Hatchlings generally emerge at night. Age at sexual maturity is believed to be 20 to 50 years.
Other
The term "green" applies not to the external coloration, but to the color of the turtle's subdermal fat.
» Other Resources
NatureServe Explorer Species Reports -- NatureServe Explorer is a source for authoritative conservation information on more than 50,000 plants, animals and ecological communtities of the U.S and Canada. NatureServe Explorer provides in-depth information on rare and endangered species, but includes common plants and animals too. NatureServe Explorer is a product of NatureServe in collaboration with the Natural Heritage Network.
ITIS Reports -- ITIS (the Integrated Taxonomic Information System) is a source for authoritative taxonomic information on plants, animals, fungi, and microbes of North America and the world.
FWS Digital Media Library -- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's National Digital Library is a searchable collection of selected images, historical artifacts, audio clips, publications, and video.