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  2. Loggerhead sea turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loggerhead_sea_turtle

    All sea turtles have similar basic nesting behaviors. Females return to lay eggs at intervals of 12–17 days during the nesting season, on or near the beach where they hatched. [77] [78] They exit the water, climb the beach, and scrape away the surface sand to form a body pit. With their hind limbs, they excavate an egg chamber in which the ...

  3. Sea turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_turtle

    Sea turtles usually lay around 100 eggs at a time, but on average only one of the eggs from the nest will survive to adulthood. [135] Raccoons, foxes, and seabirds may raid nests or hatchlings may be eaten within minutes of hatching as they make their initial run for the ocean. [ 136 ]

  4. Olive ridley sea turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive_ridley_sea_turtle

    They are unique among sea turtle species in the latter behaviour, for which they are best known. Females return to the same beach from where they hatched, to lay their eggs. They lay their eggs in conical nests about 1.5 ft deep, which they laboriously dig with their hind flippers. [4]

  5. About 50% of female sea turtles complete "false crawls," which occur when they crawl onto the beach but return to the water without laying eggs.

  6. SC sea turtles are laying eggs at a near record pace. But ...

    www.aol.com/sc-sea-turtles-laying-eggs-120000271...

    More than 8,000 sea turtle nests were logged across South Carolina beaches in 2022, the second-most ever documented. But threats to habitat and continued development are threats.

  7. Cute Footage of Turtles 'Coming Up for Air' Has Everyone ...

    www.aol.com/cute-footage-turtles-coming-air...

    Sea turtles stay in the ocean for the majority of their lives, with the females only coming to shore to lay eggs in the sand. The turtle leaves her nest on its own where the ambient temperature ...

  8. Natal homing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natal_homing

    Many turtles from the same beaches show up at the same feeding areas. Once reaching sexual maturity in the Atlantic Oceans, the female Loggerhead makes the long trip back to her natal beach to lay her eggs. The Loggerhead sea turtle in the North Atlantic cover more than 9,000 miles round trip to lay eggs on the North American shore.

  9. Clutch (eggs) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clutch_(eggs)

    A sea turtle clutch. A clutch of eggs is the group of eggs produced by birds, amphibians, or reptiles, often at a single time, particularly those laid in a nest. In birds, destruction of a clutch by predators (or removal by humans, for example the California condor breeding program) results in double-clutching. The technique is used to double ...