Do’s and Don’ts for Sea Turtle Nesting Season

Sea turtle nesting season started early this year! Protect sea turtles by following recommendations from Loggerhead Marinelife Center.

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Hatching crawling to the ocean. Photo by Deano Cook
Hatching crawling to the ocean. Photo by Deano Cook

On February 11, Loggerhead Marinelife Center (LMC) documented the earliest sea turtle nest it has ever recorded, signaling the start of another busy nesting season. The earliest nest on record in Florida occurred on February 4, 2025. The season officially runs from March 1 through October 31, when tens of thousands of sea turtles return to Palm Beach County to lay their eggs. Nesting season serves as a reminder of the recently expanded voluntary Sea Turtle Protection Zone (STPZ), which now includes Palm Beach County’s entire 45-mile stretch of coastline.

In 2025, researchers at LMC recorded 20,871 sea turtle nests from leatherbacks, loggerheads, and green turtles. To ensure another productive nesting season, LMC urges beachgoers to familiarize themselves with what to do if they encounter a nest, hatchling, or sea turtle.

Locals and visitors can protect sea turtles by following these guidelines:

  • Keep Your Distance: Never approach or touch a nesting sea turtle. Keep your distance, remain quiet, and keep all lights off (including flash photography and cellphones). Touching, prodding, or shining lights is illegal and may cause nesting turtles to not lay eggs or disturb them, which can affect how well the nests are covered and camouflaged.
  • Let Hatchlings Emerge: If you see hatchlings on the beach, allow them to crawl to the ocean on their own. Removing or digging hatchlings out of a nest is illegal. Removing sand above the nest will make it more difficult for the hatchlings to emerge.
  • Avoid Certain Areas: Enter the beach at designated access points and avoid walking on the dunes or beach vegetation to protect sea turtle nests, shorebird nests, and the dune plant ecosystem.
  • Minimize Light: Keep lights off at home while not in use and close your blinds at night to avoid adding to overall sky glow.
  • Take Your Belongings: Remove obstacles such as beach chairs, tables, water sport equipment, and umbrellas before dark. Properly throw away trash so that it doesn’t blow into the water or become an obstacle for a sea turtle.
  • Digging and Holes: Only dig holes below high tide line in the hard-packed sand to avoid incubating sea turtle nests, and avoid using shovels. Fill all holes back in and knock over sandcastles so that nesting turtles and hatchlings are not impacted by these structures.
  • Additionally, the STPZ recommends that boaters minimize traveling within the designated area, operate at the slowest, safest speed possible in the zone, wear polarized sunglasses, and keep eyes ahead during travel to help spot and protect sea turtles and other marine life. The zone extends 1 mile offshore.

If sea turtle eggs become exposed, LMC advises to leave the eggs and nest untouched. If a hatchling seems disoriented, LMC advises visitors to bring the hatchling to its 24-hour rescue cooler, which is located at the entrance of the center. Threatened and endangered hatchlings should be transported with extreme care in a bucket with damp sand (but no water) to prevent accidental drowning.

For more information on STPZ and nesting season, visit marinelife.org/STPZ. To track satellite-tagged sea turtles, visit marinelife.org/research.

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