Green Turtle in the Great Barrier Reef

Common Name: Green Turtle
Family: Chelonia mydas
The green turtle is named for the greenish colour of its body fat. Hatchlings
are dark but adults have a smooth, olive brown shell marked with darker streaks
and spots. The bottom shell is white or yellowish and each paddle shaped flipper
usually has one claw. Green turtles can be distinguished from most other turtles by the single pair of scales on the front of the head.
Hatchling green turtles are carnivorous; juveniles and young adults eat many
things including man-o-war and other jellyfish. When green turtles reach 20 to
25 centimetres (8 to 10 inches) in shell length, however, they begin feeding on
algae or sea grass on shallow flats. No one knows how old the turtles are when
this occurs. Adult green turtles are unique among turtles in being plant
eaters.
The vast beds of sea grass found throughout the tropics serve as pastures for
green turtles. Sea grass is high in fibre and low in protein. As an adaptation
to this diet, green turtles maintain "grazing plots" of young leaves by feeding
repeatedly in the same area. By eating young plants in the grazing plots, green
turtles can avoid older leaves that are higher in fibre, and thus increase the
percentage of protein in their diet.
Interesting Facts about Green Turtles:
Turtles excrete salt absorbed in sea water from their eyes, which is why they
seem to cry.
Some female turtles produce eggs four years after mating.
All chelonian turtles lay their eggs on land, even the marine turtles.
The green turtle can stay under water for over five hours without coming up for
air.
Once a male turtle hatches and enters the ocean, it will probably not step on
land again.
When in danger the green turtle can swim almost 20 miles an hour to escape.
When in the eggs, turtles take about 2 months to incubate and their sex is
determined by the temperature. Under 29 degrees they become male, over 29
degrees they become female.
Female turtles mate with several males in the ocean and store the sperm inside
them, so a single nest may hold babies from various fathers.
Only one out of one thousand turtles survive after hatching.
Back
This site is © Copyright Tim Saxon 2004-2005, All Rights Reserved
site optimised by site-pro.co.uk
Steve's free web templates
|