More than a half million sea turtles hatched in SC this year

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More than a half million sea turtles hatched in SC this year
A baby sea turtle waves goodbye as he made for the ocean after hatching from his nest at Hunting Island. Photo courtesy Melissa Lewis

More than a half million loggerhead sea turtle hatchlings made their way into the ocean from our beautiful South Carolina beaches this year. That’s one heck of a record season all along the Palmetto State’s coast.

With a preliminary figure of 524,518 emerged eggs, sea turtles have laid the most nests on South Carolina beaches in 2019 since record keeping began in the early 1980s, according to the S.C. Department of Natural Resources.

It dwarfs any recent year on record. For comparison, 2016 was the previous record nesting year, and it had 396,441 eggs emerge.

A whopping 8,798 loggerhead sea turtle nests were laid in this season on state beaches; destroying the previous record of 6,444 set in 2016, which had surpassed the then-previous record of 5,193 set in 2013.

According to a report in the Post & Courier, more females are coming in to nest in recent years and are believed to be breeding-age adults born in the 1980s when more stringent nest protection was getting underway.

During that decade, about a half-million hatchlings crawled to the sea from S.C. nests. In the years since, the success rate has seen more than 10 times that number make the crawl. In the past 10 years alone more than 2.5 million hatchlings emerged, according to DNR estimates.

Then came 2019, matching the hatchling total of the entire first decade.

When they were put on the federal endangered species list, the numbers of Atlantic nesting loggerheads were thought to be in decline.

South Carolina, however, has been a leader in the recovery work, according to the article. The sheer numbers of female turtles that might be out there suggest a wilder prospect: Thousands more nests could soon jam the beaches.

Local surprises this turtle season

The 2019 season began four days earlier than it usually does with an April 26th nest laid on Hilton Head by a Kemp’s ridley, the world’s most endangered sea turtle.

Also, Beaufort saw a few rare Green sea turtle nests this year as well. Hunting Island had it’s first ever Green nest and Hilton Head had one too.

The first hatch of the 2019 season occurred in Hilton Head on June 27th. It was the Kemp’s ridley nest.

Sea turtle numbers seem to really be on the rise both here in the Beaufort area and all over the S.C. coast. Over a half million baby sea turtles this year. Wow. If we continue to let nature take its course….we might just keep having record years like 2019.

Here’s hoping.