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  2. 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.

  3. Turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtle

    While most species build nests and lay eggs where they forage, some travel miles. The common snapping turtle walks 5 km (3 mi) on land, while sea turtles travel even further; the leatherback swims some 12,000 km (7,500 mi) to its nesting beaches. [13] [89] Most turtles create a nest for their eggs. Females usually dig a flask-like chamber in ...

  4. Mon Repos Conservation Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mon_Repos_Conservation_Park

    Mon Repos is a popular tourist attraction, with around 25,000 visitors every season. Beach access is now managed during the season to ensure that the impact of humans on nesting sea turtles is minimal. Mon Repos is French for "My Rest" and was the name of the homestead established by Augustus Purling Barton in 1884. Barton was a pioneer of the ...

  5. 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.

  6. Olive ridley sea turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive_ridley_sea_turtle

    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 ] In the Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea near Honavar in Karnataka , the majority of Olive Ridleys nest in two or three large assemblies near Gahirmatha in Odisha .

  7. Flatback sea turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatback_sea_turtle

    The number of eggs in a flatback sea turtle's clutch are fewer than other sea turtles. [6] It will have an average of 50 eggs laid each time in a clutch, while other sea turtles may lay up to 100-150 eggs in a clutch. [6] [8] The eggs are about 55 mm (2.2 in) long within these clutches. [6]

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    mail.aol.com

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  9. Western pond turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_pond_turtle

    Sexually mature females of the western pond turtle produce 5–13 eggs per clutch. They deposit eggs either once or twice a year. They may travel some distance from water for egg-laying, moving as much as 0.8 km (1/2 mile) away from and up to 90 m (300 ft) above the nearest source of water, but most nests are within 90 m (300 ft) of water.