Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 40 | Page 48

Kiawah’s Legendary Loggerheads K By Lynn Sager, Permit Holder, Kiawah Island Turtle Patrol  iawah Island has had a long-standing love affair with the “ancient lady” of our Island, Caretta caretta, commonly known as the loggerhead sea turtle. Her ancestors go back perhaps 150 million years, to the time of the dinosaurs. Kiawah’s focus on Loggerhead protection began in 1972 when a group of Charleston college students sought to observe their nesting patterns. After receiving permission from the Island’s owners, they applied for and received a small grant from the South Carolina Wildlife and Marine Resources Department (today’s SCDNR) as well as the use of a Jeep for night patrol on the beach. Their observation of predation by raccoons led to the installation of a rookery in 1973. The following year heavy rains and flooding caused all but nine of the nests to wash away. In an attempt to save the hatchlings, the friends constructed a shed and placed it in the secondary dunes. Eggs were packed in Styrofoam coolers, stored in the shed, and periodically moistened. The hatchlings were released within 24 hours of emergence, and in an ongoing effort to protect the turtles, these practices continued until 1977. Subsequently, fungi and manpower issues, as well as concerns about interfering with temperatures that affect the sex of the hatchlings, caused re-evaluation and modification of the process. (For a full account of the early efforts by the students, see “What Was Old Is New Again” in Naturally Kiawah Volume 33 Winter/Spring 2015.) In 1977 the Kiawah Island Community Association (KICA) took over the program, and hatchling protection continued, but the education of residents and visitors became a primary focus. At this time, the loggerhead was designated endangered under the Federal Endangered Species Act and remains there to this day. The shed approach was soon discontinued, and procedures similar to those in effect today were established. In 1985, the SCDNR began issuing permits for sea turtle protection programs. The first permit recipient was Keith Kriet, a naturalist with KICA. According to Charlotte Hope, SCDNR wildlife biologist, before the institution of protection permits, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service required scientific research/collection permits. 46 Naturally Kiawah