Southern Explorations

COUNTRY SPECIFIC INFO

 


 
© 2005-2009 Southern Explorations
 
Website design and programming
TerraRhythm
Media for Vibrant Change

Articles About Panama Tours And Travel | The Hawksbill Turtles of Panama

The hawksbill is Panama's most prevalent species, living among the coral reefs and rocky environments that provide its main source of food, sponges. Almost exclusively a tropical species, it grows to three feet in length and up to 150 pounds, acquiring its name from the shape of its beak. Its legs and head have a striking mosaic pattern, but its most distinguishing feature, and what makes it most vulnerable, is its multi-hued brown, orange or yellow shell, that humans use to make decorative tortoiseshell items. Though the species receives protections under various international agreements as well as Panamanian law, demand for its shell, along with threats to its habitat, keep the hawksbill's status critically endangered most everywhere.
 
Return to Previous Page

More About Panama's Hawksbill Turtles

Panama's Most Prevalent Species But Threatened Nontheless
The creatures first arrive in their Panama off-shore habitat from the deep sea at one to three years of age. Every two to three years, females nest at night usually between July and October three times during the wet season. Most nesting takes place in August and September.
Visitors on Panama tours may observe hawksbills in several locations. One of the best spots is the province of Bocas del Toro in northwestern Panama on the islands and mainland coasts. The most significant nesting sites in Isla Bastimentos Marine National Park are on the islands of Cayos Zapatillas. Other nesting sites are on Isla Colon at Playa Bluff and Playa Larga on Isla Bastimentos as well as in the San San Pondsack Wetlands wildlife refuge on mainland Bocas. Playa Chiriqui, a beach east of Peninsula Valiente, though remote, is a peaceful unpopulated place to visit where hawksbills may be observed. Though still considered the most important Atlantic nesting site for the species, its populations here have dwindled dramatically from what they once were. The Isla de Canas Wildlife Refuge off the Pacific coast on the Azuero Peninsula in central Panama is a popular nesting site for other turtle species, but few hawksbills come there to nest.
Efforts by such entities as the Caribbean Conservation Corporation's Sea Turtle Survival League are working with communities to protect the habitat of Playa Chiriqui and nearby Escudo de Veraguas Island to boost populations of both the hawksbill and the leatherback turtle species. Begun in 2003, the Chiriqui Beach Hawksbill and Leatherback Research and Conservation Program consists of monitoring the species, protecting the nesting sites and educating the public about the importance of conservation measures.
In 2006, the World Wildlife Fund began a study to determine the effects of climate change on hawksbill turtles. Scientists are looking at how temperature changes in air, water and sand may alter nesting and feeding habitat, sex ratios and migration patterns. This data will be used to design a broader study, encompassing the other marine turtle species.

SOUTHERN EXPLORATIONS
IS A PROUD
MEMBER / SPONSOR OF THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS

The International Ecotourism Society Leave No Trace American Whitewater Ecuadoran Rivers Institute Adventure Travel Trade Association International Galapagos Tour Operators Association Washington Wilderness Coalition Headwaters Institute Cascadia Wildlands Project

CONTACT US

CALL
1.877.784.5400
TOLL FREE
OUTSIDE
THE U.S.A. CALL
1.206.784.8111

MORE ARTICLES & INFO.

General Panama Articles
The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
The Birds of Panama
The Red Frogs of Panama
The Magnificent Coral of Panama
Surfing in Panama
Surfing the Caribbean Coast of Panama
Surfing the Pacific Coast of Panama
Snorkeling & Diving in Panama
Snorkeling & Diving in Pacific Panama
Snorkeling in the San Blas Islands
Snorkeling & Diving in Bocas del Toro
Panama's Marine Turtles
The Marine Turtles of Panama
The Leatherback Turtles of Panama
The Hawksbill Turtles of Panama
The Olive Ridley Turtles of Panama
Indigenous Peoples of Panama
Indigenous Panama
The Kuna People of Panama
The Kuna Yala
The Embera-Wounaan People of Panama
The Ngobe-Bugle People of Panama
The Naso People of Panama
Panama's Islands
The Caribbean Islands of Western Panama
The Caribbean Islands of Central and Eastern Panama
The Pacific Islands of Eastern Panama
The Pacific Islands of Central and Western Panama
About the Panama Canal
French Dreams of a Panama Canal
The French Building of the Panama Canal
Working and Dying on the French Panama Canal Construction Project
The American Building of the Panama Canal
Working on the American Panama Canal Project
Diplomacy and the Start of America's Control of the Panama Canal
Diplomacy and the End of US Control of the Panama Canal