INTAN AMALINA MOHD ALI The Star 3 Oct 15;
GEORGE TOWN: It is the norm for a turtle to lay about 100 eggs or more each time but only a handful were found after one turtle nested on Batu Ferringhi beach.
Despite efforts to secure the turtle nest, it is believed most of the eggs were stolen.
Fisheries Department officers who had dug up the nest to recover the eggs for incubation and hatching at the Pantai Kerachut Turtle Sanctuary could only find five eggs.
Rasa Sayang Resort and Spa communications director Suleiman Tunku Abdul Rahman said the site fronting the resort was cordoned off when the hotel learnt of the turtle landing.
“We were notified about this early in the morning and we quickly closed the area where the turtle was sighted.
“There had been a change of guards in between and I think this was when the eggs were stolen,” he said.
Fisheries officers who were duly informed found the five eggs when they located the nest at 11am.
Suleiman said a turtle had also nested on the beach fronting Rasa Sayang’s sister hotel Golden Sands Resort in August, and that the fisheries team recovered about 140 eggs then.
“The turtle sighting is a good omen but it is sad that many eggs are missing,” Suleiman said.
A hotel worker first spotted the female turtle crawling up the beach at about 6am yesterday. It left at about 7.15am.
A crowd of hotel employees and guest had by then gathered to capture the moment with their smartphones.
State Fisheries Department officer Mohd Syahrulnizam Ismail said the turtle could have laid her eggs before dawn.
“It would take about 30 minutes for it to lay its egg. We can be certain that the turtle will come back again to lay eggs again in the same spot.
“A turtle can lay around 80 to 100 at any one time,” he said.
The five recovered eggs will be incubated and hatched at the turtle sanctuary on the northern edge of the island.
Turtle nesting to be closely guarded
The Star 6 Oct 15;
GEORGE TOWN: The Fisheries Department expects the turtle whose nesting was disturbed to return within the next 10 days to Batu Ferringhi to lay new eggs.
Department officer Mohd Syahrulnizam Ismail said two staff members would be stationed near the Rasa Sayang Hotel beachfront to look out for the turtle.
“From our experience, we are certain that the turtle would return and our staff will be there from Sunday.”
Mohd Syahrulnizam said the department had taken the five eggs salvaged from the earlier nesting to the incubation and hatching centre at the Pantai Kerachut Turtle Sanctuary.
Most eggs laid by the turtle on Friday were stolen and only five remained when the nest was dug up by Fisheries Department officers.
The theft took place despite the hotel cordoning off the area on learning about the turtle landing.
Mohd Syahrulnizam said it was not easy to safeguard turtle nestings as the stretch was a tourist haunt and anyone could have stolen the eggs.
It’s normal for a sea turtle to lay about 100 eggs or more at any one time.