Sea Turtle Satellite Tracking | Kawana

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Animated Map  |  Project & Turtle Information
Project Turtles: Aitkanti | Apotilï | Caroline | Choroeüo | Cristina | Fermina | Gurí | Kawana | Ibélice | Ibonga | Idun | Jamur | Marina | Palana | Quasimoda |Rickie | Romana | Shelldon | Victoria | Yalimapo | Zoe
suriname-kawana

Cumulative distance traveled: 204 km

Maximum dive depth: 15 m

Notes: UPDATE: After being released, Kawana stayed close to the nesting beach and nested again on the morning of July 5th. She continue to stay close offshore of the nesting grounds in both Suriname and French Guiana, most likely planning on nesting. Unfortunately, she did not have the chance. Twenty days after being released, it appears that Kawana was caught in a fisherman’s gillnet and drown just offshore of the Marowijne River mouth between Suriname and French Guiana. We believe that Kawana was killed by a gillnet based upon the usual diving profile sent by the transmitter, suggesting that the turtle remained for a long period of time underwater, which is in most of the case correlated with an interaction with a fishing gear. Her body, with her transmitter still attached, was found washed ashore on the Suriname side of the river mouth with severe shoulder injuries, the “signature” of an interaction with a gillnet. Drifting gillnet is a severe threat for leatherback survival in the Guianas, and Kawana death has just demonstrated this once more and is one reason why leatherbacks are critically endangered. The other Suriname leatherback, Aitkanti, was much more lucky; after having been successful in avoiding the coastal gillnets, she is now more than 3,000 km away from Suriname in the East Atlantic.

Cumulative Distance refers to how far the turtle has actually travelled since it was first tagged. Straight Line Distance refers to the distance between where the turtle was first tagged and its current position in a straight line.

Please note: The presentation of data here does not constitute publication, and the researchers who contributed this data retain all intellectual property rights.
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Map courtesy of Dan Evans, Sea Turtle Conservancy. Data © WWF and Partners.
This map is updated with new points as soon as they are received by the Sea Turtle Conservancy. The red location point is the most recent location received for this turtle. If the red point is more than two months old, then the transmitter is most likely no longer working.

Map may be reproduced for educational or conservational purposes with the following credit: “Data © WWF and STC, map courtesy of STC.”