Loggerheads are the largest hard-shelled sea turtle in the world.
Leatherbacks are bigger, but are part of the soft-shell family of sea turtles. Loggerheads have a
broad muscular head, powerful jaws, and have a distinct reddish-brown shell,
which is called a carapace. The carapace is elongated and heart shaped when seen
from above. The adult shell is rather smooth, and the sides become slightly
serrated as they narrow toward the tail. The paddle-like limbs are each equipped
with a pair of claws. The loggerhead is usually various shades of brown; from
its reddish-brown to dark brown carapace as well as upper surfaces of the head
and limbs, which are chestnut to dark brown also. The underbelly and the edges
of its limbs, are light yellow to tan, and the scales on the head have a creamy
yellow edge and a darker center. Telling the difference between a male and a
female loggerhead is quite easy, males have a tail that extends well beyond the
shell, where as the female’s is much shorter.
Adult loggerheads average three feet in length, and weigh approximately 250
pounds. For perspective- the largest recorded loggerhead had a 7 ½ ft. shell and
weighed in at an astounding 1,190 lbs. Unfortunately, many loggerheads, and sea
turtles in general are poached or caught in fishing nets never able to realize
their full size. Today’s loggerhead is much smaller than the loggerhead of
old.
Loggerheads have an enormous range and are found in most tropical and
subtropical seas. They do not occur in the more frigid waters of the world. In
Costa Rica, loggerheads are found on the Caribbean side, never making it to the
Pacific coast of the country. In Costa Rica, the female loggerhead nests on the
Caribbean coast preferring the southern part of the coast, but are periodically
seen as far north as Tortuguero National Park. They frequent coral reefs and
shipwrecks, seeming to prefer coastal habitats and inland water bodies, but they
will also travel hundreds of miles out to sea.
Males and females mate in the water in close proximity to their nesting
sites. The male uses its massive claws to attach itself to the female. It’s not
unusual for mating to last three hours.
Adult female loggerheads will often return, sometimes covering thousands of
miles, to the beach where they hatched, to lay their eggs. Normally taking place
at high tide and during the night, the female will lay her large clutch of eggs,
typically between 65 to 200 eggs, in a deep hole in the sand which she will
cover after she has laid all her eggs. A female can nest several times during
the breeding season, with 12-15 day intervals. Hatchlings appear about 7 to 10
weeks after the eggs are laid. Since eggs are abandoned after being laid, the
young hatchlings are on their own. When they emerge from the nest they
immediately head to the sea. This trek is survival of the fittest, and most will
never reach 1 year old.
Loggerheads are carnivores. They feed on shrimp, crab, jellyfish, mollusks
and squid but have also been known to occasionally munch on seaweed and
sargassum.
Luckily for the loggerhead, their meat is not as highly valued as that of
other marine turtles, but unfortunately, their eggs are. Poaching is a problem.
In Costa Rica, the on-going development of nesting beaches for tourism as well
as shrimp nets, in which they drown, take a serious toll on these magnificent
creatures.
It’s interesting to note that a loggerhead sea turtel can travel up to speeds
of 15 mph.
Pollution, shrimping, and development of nesting beaches are a major reason
the loggerhead has been on the endangered species list since 1978.