Archive for the ‘Habitat’ Category

USVI: Hawksbill Sea Turtles

Wednesday, August 24th, 2005

The Caneel Bay Resort in St. John offers access to exquisite reef ecosystems that have been largely protected over time.  Off Caneel Bay’s Turtle Point you may expect to encounter hawksbill sea turtles. 

Hawksbill Sea Turtle among USVI Reefs

Sea turtles are internationally and federally protected species; give them a wide berth and take no action that might disturb their natural behavior.  But pause to enjoy their majestic presence as they swim by and hunt for sponges among the reefs.

All for Naught? — 6 May 2001

Sunday, May 6th, 2001

Don’t let anybody fool you.  In a good research program, you still have to score a string of goose eggs (documenting negative occurrences) unless you’d rather depend on Karnak-like intuition to tell you what’s inside the sealed envelope.  So, conditions of a pre-dawn low tide in 45 degree temperature and northeast winds at 15 to 20 knots suggest that terrapins would prefer to burrow under a warm layer of ooze rather than be flushed out of their safe and comfortable marsh habitat.  But there’s only one way to confirm this suggestion — and not many volunteers to do so.

05-06-1

Full Moon Illuminates Pre-Dawn Low Tide

I arrived on Lieutenant Island a little before 0430.  A nearly full moon hovered over Great Island in the west, while a dull rosy glow, about the strength of a 2.5 watt nightlight, simmered in the east.  The creek was cloaked in textured darkness, layers of ripples hinting at what lay beneath.  In chest-high waders I plunged across the channel.  Mating horseshoe crabs dotted the rapids like rocks on a Maine shore.  But terrapins?  None — no heads snorkeling for air, no shells rippling the current, no turtles paddling through the rip.

05-06-2

Sunrise over Old Wharf Point

So, all for naught?  Hardly.  First, there was solid confirmation of my working hypothesis, namely: Terrapins are a lot smarter than terrapin researchers.  Secondly, as the moon set over Cape Cod Bay, a chorus of coyotes howled it down, echoing refrains from a pack somewhere south of Lieutenant Island to another high on the bluff of Old Wharf Point.  Then, moonset was quickly followed by a dazzling sunrise over Blackfish Creek.

And, to punctuate a morning well spent, I caught sight of my first daylight meteor.  It flashed over Indian Neck, an intense white tail trailing a bead of sparklers, whooshing silently across the northern sky and disappearing behind Griffin Island and The Gut.  All this and I still reached the donut shop two minutes before it opened and one minute before the Wellfleet Police patrol car.

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Coyote in Salt Marsh of Old Wharf Peninsula

As the mutts and I jeeped over to check the Old Wharf marsh at high tide, we had a surprise encounter with a pair of coyotes.  This morning at dawn, I had heard howling from Old Wharf Point from what sounded like a pair and their offspring.  The behavior of these coyotes seemed to confirm the presence of a nearby den.

When we reached the turn-off to the town landing, we spotted a coyote patrolling the marsh wrack line.  Since I did not have a telephoto lens handy, all images represent actual distances.  Motor still running, I reached for my camera and unzipped the driver’s window . . . fully expecting her to dash for cover.

05-06-4

Female Coyote Marks Her Territory

Instead, she turned and approached the jeep, cutting the distance by about a half, then squatted to mark scent midway between us and the background hill.

05-06-5

Coyote’s Mate Approaches from Southwest

As she sprayed, her mate approached from the southwest and both remained alert, keeping themselves between the jeep and the hill.  They held their ground until we drove off toward Old Wharf Point, after which they slowly zigzagged into the cover of the background hill.

Now I’m a cold-hearted reptilian type and know little about these warm-blooded critters.  But this behavior seemed in contrast to other encounters I’ve had with coyotes on the Cape.  Not only did I have the jeep’s motor running, but she watched me as I frantically searched my backpack for my camera, hurriedly and noisily unzipped the window, pointed the camera in her direction, and tracked her movements with electronic shutter beeps.  She should have spooked.  If I did know more about coyotes, I might suspect that this undeveloped hill sheltered a den of whelps.

05-06-6

Fishing for Schoolie Stripers in Blackfish Creek

By the evening low, conditions had plunged back into bone-numbing range. Air temperature nudged 44 degrees at 1700 and kept falling to 39 by tide’s end.  Water in the tidal flats had dropped back to 58°F.  A stiff 25-knot breeze from the east northeast kicked up murky visibility and drove wind chills into a very unpleasant range.  I’ll let you do the math.

 

Still, weekend warriors from the urban mainland couldn’t be discouraged from casting a final lure at schools of stripers which have migrated back into Blackfish Creek for spring fattening.

05-06-7 480

Male Terrapin #680 Followed by Female Terrapin #663

And nothing short of ice floes scrubs the terrapin patrol.  Conditions had deteriorated so badly with this incessant blow that nothing, not even horseshoe crabs, were visible on the rip.  But as tide reached maximum ebb, I netted two terrapins by blind luck more than skilled turtling.  The first (#680) is a mature male of 12.4 centimeters length and almost 300 grams. He was last spotted on 8 June 2000. Since then he gained 6.5% body mass while growing less than .1 centimeter all around. The second turtle (#663) is a mature female of 18.75 centimeters length and 1124 grams.  She had last been observed on 4 June 2000 with nearly identical measurements.  Besides her inpidual ID marking, Terrapin 663 is rather easy to spot with an enlarged, elongated 4th vertebral and a tiny rear vertebral.

Finally Breaking — 28 April 2001

Saturday, April 28th, 2001

04-28-1 480

Still Frigid Shoreline of Blackfish Creek

Overnight saw temperatures dip to freezing (32°F).  So, I was unsurprised at daybreak readings of 47°F air and 50°F water.  Nor was I surprised that not a single terrapin remained active in Blackfish Creek.  In fact, horseshoe crab mating along the sandbars of the rip has dropped to near nothing.  Only a single pair appeared during the entire span of the morning low tide.

04-28-2 480

Blackfish Creek Begins to Clear

Winds were still gusting out of the north at 25 knots, but by mid-morning the clouds had begun to part, the breeze had moderated to 10 to 15, and sunshine broke through.  Forecasts for Monday through Friday predict highs of 70 degrees and lows dropping only to around 50.  The turtles will awake once more.

Perspective — 27 April 2001

Friday, April 27th, 2001

Air temperature 44°F, water 49°F, wind 20 knots out of the NE with 30+ gusts = a return to brumation.

04-27-1 480

Cold and Turtle-Free Blackfish Creek

Showing an even-keeled sensibility, which has enabled 250 million years of survival, the Wellfleet Bay terrapins’ decision to retreat was indeed the better part of valor.  Not a single turtle braved today’s brutal conditions, opting instead to rest snuggly in the oozy warmth of their muddy beds.  “Wake me when this miserable spring is over,” one yawned to the other.  And near-audible z’s could be felt resonating from the bottom of Blackfish Creek.  If only humans had such a fine-honed sense of perspective.

“Watson, the games afoot!” — 22 April 2001

Sunday, April 22nd, 2001

Water temperatures have crept ever so slowly into the upper 50s, and finally today, spring sprung with a vengeance.  A fierce westerly breeze drove hazy warmth across the Outer Cape.  Briefly this afternoon water over the tidal flats registered 60°F.

04-22-1

Warm Spring Temps and 30 Knot Breeze

So, despite 30+ knot gusts whipping across the bay and converting Blackfish Creek into a rodeo bull-riding event, the temptation proved irresistible to visit with our paludal pals, perhaps finally awake from six and a half months of winter slumber.  We hauled the kayaks across the tinkerytoy bridge to Lieutenant Island, and saddled up for a Disney “E” ride.

04-22-2 480

Kayaks Ready

The tide flooded westward out of Blackfish Creek and slammed into bay breakers thrust eastward by prevailing gusts.  No need to paddle upstream; wind skipped the kayak like a flat stone across the wave tops.  But the game proved well worth the candle when a large, mature female terrapin surfaced 25 feet ahead, gulped a breath of air, scanned the horizon for predators, and then uttered a reptilian unquotable as she spotted Turtleman to windward.  She headed to the bottom and slipped over the rip into the deeper waters of the Singles Bar where adult terrapins gather during the mating season.

The paddle back to shore — against 35 knot gusts — took a bit more effort than the trip upstream.  But after a winter of terrapin deprivation, sight of our first turtle of the season made all well.

So, Watson, get your gear in shape.  The games afoot.