Help sea turtles have nesting success this year

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March 18, 2025

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Suggested post: Nesting season is underway for sea turtles. You can help them have nesting success
by keeping lights out, maintaining your distance and stashing trash: https://content.govdelivery.com/
accounts/FLFFWCC/bulletins/3d7787c @MyFWC #Florida #FWC2025

sea turtle nesting
Help sea turtles have nesting success this year Nesting season has begun for sea turtles along
Florida’s beaches, and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) is shar-
ing the reminder that both residents and visitors alike can help protect vulnerable nesting and
hatchling sea turtles while visiting Florida’s coastal areas.

Sea turtles typically return to nest in March along Florida’s southeast Atlantic coast from Brev-
ard County south to Broward County, while nesting begins on the Gulf Coast or north Florida
beaches in April or May. Because our state’s shorelines provide important nesting habitat for
several species of threatened and endangered sea turtles, beachgoers can have a significant
impact on the success of this year’s nesting season.

To help nesting sea turtles, people can take easy steps to protect them, including giving them
space, minimizing disturbances and keeping beaches clean and dark.

Lights out: Any lighting can misdirect and disturb nesting sea turtles and their hatchlings, lead-
ing them away from the ocean and toward potential danger. To prevent this, beachgoers should
use natural starlight to see while on the beach at night and avoid using flashlights or cellphones.
Anyone living along or visiting Florida beaches can do their part by putting porch, parking or
deck lights out when not in use and closing curtains after dark to avoid disorienting nesting and
hatchling sea turtles on the beach. If lighting is still visible from the beach, be sure it is long,
low and shielded

Admire from afar: While it can be exciting to witness sea turtles on the beach, getting too close
(50 feet or less) to nesting sea turtles can cause them to leave the beach before they complete
the nesting process. If an animal changes its behavior, you’re likely too close. Remember – it is
illegal to harm or disturb nesting sea turtles, their nests and eggs, or to pick up hatchlings. 

Clear the way at the end of the day: Female sea turtles expend large amounts of energy crawl-
ing out of the surf and far enough up the sand in order to dig and lay nests in spots that are less
vulnerable to the tides. Obstacles on the beach can entrap and prevent them from nesting as
they crawl across the sand to lay their eggs. Trash, holes in the sand and other obstacles can also
prevent sea turtle hatchlings from reaching the water once they emerge from their nests. Food
scraps attract predators, such as raccoons and crows, that prey on sea turtle hatchlings. Litter on
beaches can entangle sea turtles, birds and other wildlife. What can you do to help? Properly stash
or recycle all trash, fill in man-made holes in the sand, and remove all beach toys, gear and furni-
ture from the sand before sunset. Fishing line can be deadly to sea turtles, waterbirds and other
wildlife, so be sure to dispose of it properly. To find a monofilament recycling station near you,
visit mrrp.myfwc.com.

For more information about nesting sea turtles and how you can help, visit MyFWC.com/SeaTurtle
or see the FWC’s Be a Beach Hero” brochure. Other ways to help sea turtles include reporting those
that are sick, injured, entangled or dead to the FWC’s Wildlife Alert Hotline at 888-404-FWCC (3922).

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