Dead olive ridley sea turtle found in El Nido

Date:

Share post:

PUERTO PRINCESA CITY, Palawan –– Environment enforcers in El Nido town have warned residents and visiting tourists not to litter the sea with their plastic trash, which often suffocates marine wildlife to death.

Bienvenido Veguilla Jr. of the El Nido Taytay Managed Resource Protected Area (ENTMRPA) aired this warning Monday following the discovery of the decomposing carcass of a 50-centimeter olive ridley sea turtle (pawikan) on the shore of Barangay Corong-Corong in El Nido town on Sunday.

He said the body of the sea turtle did not have any wound when it was found and they suspect it died due to plastic waste ingestion.

Veguilla said the sea turtle was just one of the marine wildlife that fell victim to the plastics carelessly tossed into the sea by unscrupulous residents.

The olive ridley (Lepidochelys olivacea) is one of the smaller sea turtles with fascinating nesting behavior called “arribada” where thousands go ashore at one time to lay their eggs over a few days. They can grow around two feet long and can weigh about 100 lbs. -PNA

RIZAL MEMORIAL COLLEGEspot_img

Related articles

As Thousands Bid Farewell to Bobet Baterbonia, Calls for Truth Grow Louder

TALACOGON, Agusan del Sur (June 25) — The streets of this quiet town filled with mourners on Wednesday...

CHED Order Raises Tough Questions on Accountability in Deaths of Ateneo Players

MANILA (June 25) — More than two weeks after two Ateneo de Manila University basketball players drowned during...

Waiting for Help from the Sky: The Earthquake Exposed More Than Broken Buildings

DAVAO CITY (June 25) --- Sixteen days after a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck southern Mindanao, some communities in...

Comelec Says Machines Are Ready for BARMM Polls. The Bigger Challenge Is Vote-Buying

COTABATO CITY (June 25) — With less than three months before the first parliamentary elections in the Bangsamoro...