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Marine Reptiles • Reptiles are cold-blooded, air-breathing animals with tough, scaly skin • Marine reptiles include: – Sea turtles (7 species) – Sea snakes (55 species) – Marine crocodiles (1) – Marine lizards (iguanas; 1) Marine Reptiles • Like most fish, marine reptiles are ectothermic and poikilothermic; “cold-blooded” • Marine reptiles breath air; they have internal lungs, not gills • Marine reptiles are equipped with special salt glands to concentrate and excrete salts • Leathery shells prevent eggs from drying out Marine Reptiles: Sea Turtles • Sea turtles belong to an ancient group of reptiles • Their body is enclosed by an armor-like shell, or carapace that is fused to their backbone • All are streamlined and adapted for life in the water – Forelimbs are modified into flippers – Hindlimbs act as rudders – Cannot retract head or limbs Marine Reptiles: Sea Turtles Our Local Sea Turtles scienceblogs.com Leatherback Hawksbill http://www.costaricaturtles.com/costa_new_seaturtles.html http://fwie.fw.vt.edu Green www.underwater.com.au Loggerhead www.dnr.state.md.us/ fisheriesoxford/ research/fwh/ seaturtles.html Kemp’s Ridley Marine Reptiles: Sea Turtles • Sea turtles spend their entire lives at sea; only females come ashore to lay eggs – Homing (return to same beach where they were born to lay eggs) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKkScAel52w http://www.conservation.org/great_turtle_race/Pages/main.aspx Temperature-dependent Sex Determination • When female sea turtles come ashore to lay their eggs, the depth of the burrow she digs affects the temperature of the eggs that are laid • Temperature (not genetics) determines the sex of the offspring – Warmer nests females © Aqua Image/age fotostock Got Arribada? • Female sea turtles aggregate on the beach in mass nestings called arribadas http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4u3GL9SyyM Save the Sea Turtles! • Most of the world’s sea turtles are threatened or endangered with extinction • Dangers include: – Shrimp trawling; Long-line fishing – Beach destruction, hardening of shorelines, vehicles and dogs on beaches – Bright beach lights – Marine debris; Ghost netting – Global warming Credit: © James Watt/Visuals Unlimited …and closer to home • Every fall and winter, the local sea turtles off Long Island need to return south to the warmer waters of the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico • Sea turtles that remain can become “cold stunned” – <50°F – Call the Riverhead Foundation: 369-9840 Marine Reptiles: Sea Snakes • Approximately 55 species of sea snakes are found in the tropical Indian and Pacific oceans • The tail end of sea snakes is flattened into a paddle-shape for swimming • A few species return to land to lay eggs, but most give birth to live young underwater – ovovivipous Marine Reptiles: Sea Snakes • Sea snakes are closely related to cobras; the most venomous of all snakes • Sea snake bites can be fatal to humans; extremely venomous – Why? Marine Reptiles: the Marine Iguana • The marine iguana is found on the Galapagos Islands, off the coast of South America • Marine iguanas survive in the cold, upwelled waters off the Galapagos by frequently basking on the rocks to raise their body temperature • Feed on algae • Efficient swimmers Marine Reptiles: Saltwater Crocodile • The saltwater crocodile inhabits mangrove swamps and estuaries in the eastern Indian Ocean, Australia, and some of the western Pacific islands • Very aggressive; fatal attacks on humans • Commonly 20ft long • Inhabits coast, rivers and open sea © Susan Flashman/ShutterStock, Inc.