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Turtles Under Threat!

  • 04-08-2004 6:12pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 320 ✭✭


    Hello!

    My friend and I are trying to start a letter writing campaign regarding the
    threat to the habitat of the loggerhead turtle in Greece. Please read this article
    in the Guardian on the plight of the loggerhead turtles in Zakynthos, Greece.

    http://travel.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,7445,1274402,00.html

    If you would like to put pressure on the Greek government to protect this
    endangered species, then please copy the letter below into a Word file, print
    it out, sign it and send it to:

    H.E. Ambassador Stelios Mallikourtis,
    The Greek Embassy,
    1 Upper Pembroke Street,
    Dublin 2

    or else copy and paste it into an email (it's probably better than just
    forwarding it, as it looks more professional) and mail it to H.E.
    Ambassador Stelios Mallikourtis at dubgremb@eircom.net. It would be great if
    you could forward it to any of your friends who might be interested
    too.

    If you have any other suggestions to raise awareness of this issue,
    please contact us at this address ( helen.carr@SaveTurtles.com ).

    Please take action on this; I can't bear to think of the poor little
    turtles crawling towards night clubs instead of the sea, and anyway, the
    turtles have been coming to Zakythos for about 10 million years -- I
    don't see why they should be driven away by humans!

    Thanks very much for your help,

    Helen and Eoin

    For more information on this issue see:

    http://www.panda.org.za/article.php?id=319

    Letter:
    Ambassador Stelios Mallikourtis,
    Embassy of Greece,
    1 Upper Pembroke Street,
    Dublin 2
    Email: dubgremb@eircom.net

    Dear Ambassador Mallikourtis,

    I am writing to voice my strong opposition to the cessation of
    conservation activity at the National Marine Park of Zakynthos, which formerly
    protected the loggerhead turtles - (Caretta caretta) nesting grounds
    on the island, and the subsequent opening of Laganas beach to tourists.
    The National Marine Park was created following a 1992 European
    Commission (EC) directive decreeing that Greece must conserve the Zakynthos
    nesting grounds. I urge the Greek government to respect its international
    commitments and take immediate action to protect this important
    habitat.

    The nesting season for the loggerhead turtle - an endangered species
    - is from May to October, and thus coincides with the tourist season.
    The turtles come ashore to lay their eggs in the sand, after a
    two-month incubation period the hatchlings should emerge and, guided by the
    light of the moon, make their way to the sea. On Laganas beach many
    turtles are too alarmed by the tourist activity to approach the nesting
    grounds, and many of the eggs that are successfully laid in the sand are
    crushed by cars and motorbikes; those hatchlings that do emerge are often
    confused by lights from buildings and streets, which cause them to
    wander inland where they are crushed by vehicles or die in the sunlight
    from heat exhaustion.

    Even under ideal circumstances loggerhead turtles are a vulnerable
    species, with only a small percentage of hatchlings surviving to maturity.
    Water pollution, light-pollution, crowded beaches, loss of nesting
    habitat and the risk of drowning in fishing nets have all contributed to
    the drastic decline of the loggerheads and other sea turtles. If
    conservation activity resumes at the National Marine Park of Zakynthos, Greece
    would be going some way towards redressing the balance in the
    animals' favour.

    Zakynthos is known across the world for its turtles and much of the
    merchandise sold to tourists on the island is turtle-related. Scientists
    consider Zakynthos to be the most important endangered turtle habitat in
    Europe and among the most important in the world. It would be
    disastrous, both from an environmental perspective and from the perspective of
    the tourist industry, if the loggerhead turtle was to become extinct on
    Zakynthos due to poor management of its habitat and the desire for
    short-term profits from uncontrolled tourism.

    Maintaining a balance between the needs of the turtles and those of the
    tourists is not impossible: forbidding water sports on the beach,
    closing the beach at night and having it patrolled by wardens would allow
    package tourism and eco-tourism (aimed at bringing in turtle-watchers
    with minimal environmental impact) to exist side by side. The loggerhead
    turtles have been coming to Laganas for millions of years, and it is the
    duty of the Greek Government to safeguard this endangered species.

    I hope that you will take decisive action on this issue now that it has
    been brought to your attention.

    Yours sincerely,

    (Your Name)


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