Times of India | 1 year ago | 24-12-2021 | 02:49 pm
PANAJI/POINGUINIM: An early morning flippered tourist sparked off some excitement at Morjim beach after it laid 130 eggs and kicked off the nesting season for Olive Ridley turtles on the back of a productive season last year. The beach on the mouth of River Chapora and Mandrem in Pernem, and Agonda and Galgibaga in Canacona taluka are four turtle nesting sites designated under coastal regulation zone (CRZ) notification 2011. “This is the first nesting of the season. Our staff and forest guards who keep a watch on the beach noticed the turtle around 1.30am,” range forest officer (RFO) John Fernandes said. Goa’s modest turtle conservation programme was pioneered on Morjim beach in late 1990s, followed by Galgibaga, though the entire coast was open to the flippered visitors before tourism activities pushed them to isolated spaces. Around 30 to 40 nests are laid during the season, unlike the Odisha coast where mass nesting in thousands takes place. Forest staff keep vigil over the nests round-the-clock to protect them from stray dogs and poachers. Bright lights, noisy music and other tourism activities affect nesting activity. On the two beaches in the north, a total of 24 nests were laid and more than 1,700 hatchlings were released into the sea. “Last season was one of the most productive one in recent years,” a source said. Meanwhile the nesting season in Galgibaga and Agonda seems to have been delayed a bit. Nesting season in the past used to start in October though in the recent years, it has shifted to December-January and ends in March-April. This change in the start of the nesting season is attributed to climate change, RFO (wildlife) Anant Velip said, adding that the incubation period takes between 48 to 52 days. The first Olive Ridley turtle nesting was witnessed last year on December 23 with the forest department officials protecting eggs at Galgibaga beach but it was just a fortnight later that Agonda beach also witnessed the first Olive Ridley turtle nesting. A total of 22 Olive Ridleys visited the twin turtle nesting beaches of Agonda and Galgibaga last year laying a total of 2,278 eggs. The Goa coastal zone management authority (GCZMA) in the first week of November ordered the removal of a temporary swimming pool on Agonda beach.
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