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January 30, 2025

Bangladesh probes spate of turtle deaths

Credit: CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Bangladeshi scientists are probing the deaths of more than 80 turtles found washed up on the beach over the past week, a government marine research institute said Thursday.

Olive ridley sea are a relatively small and found in the world over and can live for up to 50 years in the wild.

But their numbers are declining and they have periodically been victim to mass die-off events, including earlier this month in nearby southern India.

More than 80 percent of the turtles discovered along the coast were females coming ashore to lay eggs, Mohammad Shimul Bhuiyan at the Bangladesh Oceanographic Research Institute told AFP.

"We need more time to determine the cause," he added.

Sharif Uddin, a scientist at Malaysia-based marine research organization WorldFish, said the likely culprit was overfishing and the use of sea-sweeping trawler nets.

"Turtles float on the water to breathe, but once they get entangled in , they remain underwater for too long and suffocate," he rold AFP.

"It's tragic that they come here to reproduce and end up dying."

Abid Hossain of the Bangladesh Marine Fisheries Association said that a disruption to the turtle population risked severe damage to local marine ecology.

"Last year, the marine catch was halved due to an increase in jellyfish in the seawater," he told AFP.

"Turtles eat jellyfish, which helps fish larvae survive. If we want to sustain our , we need to save the turtles."

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Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

In Bangladesh, over 80 olive ridley sea turtles have been found dead on the beach, prompting an investigation. These turtles, mostly females, were likely affected by overfishing and trawler nets, which can cause them to suffocate. The decline in turtle populations poses a threat to marine ecology, as turtles help control jellyfish populations, which in turn supports fish larvae survival and fish stocks.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.