
{
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        "description": "<p>July 6, 2011---Sea turtle nesting season is underway on Gulf of Mexico  beaches, and observers say activity seems normal. But these aren't the  same animals that nested during last year's Gulf oil spill, and  scientists are concerned about a continued rise in turtle deaths.</p>", 
        "is_us_only": "false", 
        "title": "Gulf Turtle Nests Abound, But Worries Remain", 
        "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/news/animals-news/nsf-oil-turtles-2011-vin/", 
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                {
                    "url": "http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/07/photogalleries/100722-nation-bp-gulf-oil-spill-sea-turtles-pictures/", 
                    "name": " Pictures: Baby Gulf Turtles Released Into Atlantic"
                }, 
                {
                    "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/news/animals-news/leatherback-sea-turtle-buoyancy-vin.html", 
                    "name": "Video: Sea Turtles Match Breathing to Dive Depths?"
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        "credit": " 2011 National Geographic; partially funded by NSF; field producing and videography by Fritz Faerber", 
        "smil": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/data/xml/nsf-oil-turtles-2011-vin.smil", 
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        "still": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/exposure/core_media/ngphoto/image/37198_0_615x346.jpg", 
        "transcript": "<p class=\"MsoNormal\">The first sea turtle nesting season after the 2010 BP oil spill was contained is underway in the northern Gulf of Mexico. And biologists and turtle conservation groups report a good nesting season so far.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">Last summer, as the ruptured well spewed an estimated 5 million barrels of oil into the Gulf, scientists and volunteers launched a risky rescue\u2013 moving fragile turtle eggs away from the oil danger.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">Biologists and volunteers moved about 28,000 eggs , mostly loggerhead turtles, from Alabama and Florida\u2019s Panhandle to NASA\u2019s Kennedy Space Center. The goal was to spare the vulnerable hatchlings an encounter with the oil. It\u2019s estimated around 14,000 hatchlings were released on Florida\u2019s Atlantic coast.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">The tiny turtles were not tagged, so no one really knows where they are now. And if they were spotted, they couldn\u2019t be accurately identified.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">Back on the Gulf Coast, it\u2019s nesting season once again, and conservation groups like Alabama\u2019s Share the Beach are finding <em>new</em> nests almost daily\u2013 an encouraging sign. But they caution not to read too much into the finds.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">SOT: Mike Reynolds, Share the Beach Director</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">\u201cThe nests look normal, the turtles seem normal. So, all in all it seems like a pretty good year. Of course, the turtles that are nesting this year are not the turtles that nested last year. Turtles nest every other year or thereabout and so these turtles nested two years ago. What we will be really interested in seeing is a year from now when last year\u2019s turtles that were here during the oil spill that had the greatest effect from the oil come back and nest on our beaches next year.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">There are 5 species of sea turtles that nest on the beaches of the Gulf Coast, and all of them are protected, so, every morning Share the Beach volunteers comb Alabama\u2019s coast, just as they\u2019ve done every nesting season since 2001, looking for telltale signs of a turtle nest \u2013 crawl marks and churned up area near a nest site.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">And biologists are doing a study as part of the Natural Resource Damage Assessment \u2013 attaching satellite tags to incoming mother turtles to monitor their movements.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">When the patrols spot a fresh nest too close to the waterline, they move the eggs before they set and become more sensitive to movement. They carefully put the eggs in a new nest and cordon it off.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">SOT: Reynolds</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">\u201cWe probably have less than 50 nesting sea turtles left here in Alabama. And so, just losing a few of them is a big deal. And so last year, if we lost significant numbers of sea turtles last year, then it will put a very large dent in our population down the road.\u201d</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">In neighboring Mississippi, the Institute of Marine Mammal Studies is running its own satellite tagging studies to follow the movements of Kemps Ridley turtles.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">IMMS Executive Director Moby Solangi reports some causes for concern about the Gulf\u2019s recovery. This spring he saw a 20 to 30-fold increase in dolphin deaths \u2013 most of them baby dolphins. And this was months after officials stopped the flow of leaking oil.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">SOT: Moby Solangi, President and Executive Director ,Institute for Marine Mammal Studies</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">\u201cSo, as we thought things had stabilized, there was this big jump in the dolphin mortality, more so just being the babies. And that started stabilizing in March and early April. As that started stabilizing, we saw a huge jump in the turtle mortalities. Just to give you a comparison. In the entire last year, we saw about 299 turtles that died and we had rescued about 50 for the entire year. As of today, we have 236 turtles dead and 24 live that are in our custody.\u201d</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">With half of the year still ahead, the numbers are expected to grow. That these deaths are a result of the spill cannot be said definitively. But Solangi and other researchers will be working to learn more about the spill\u2019s impact on turtles and other creatures. As far as the fate of the little turtles released last year\u2026.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">SOT: Moby Solangi, President and Executive Director of the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">\u201cTranslocation of the nests and eggs was an adequate move. Whether it did succeed or not, it was more of a heartwarming and heart tugging way of doing things. The only way we can say if it was scientific is if we recover or tag and follow and see where they went and how many survived. We will never know that. And until then, it will always be an enigma.\u201d</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">Back in Alabama, volunteers carry on, knowing they could be helping save an endangered species.</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">SOT: Reynolds</p><p class=\"MsoNormal\">\u201cPeople realize that this beach is more than just a wonderful place to come sunbathe and fish and hang out. It is a critical habitat, not just important, but a critical habitat for a very important species, an endangered species of sea turtles. They cannot survive without this beach. They have to nest on these beaches. They\u2019re driven to.\"</p>", 
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