scubaseason

Green turtle

Chelonia mydas

Sighting evidence at Pedras Secas, Fernando de Noronha

One of the most wide-ranging marine reptiles, green turtles graze on seagrass and algae throughout tropical and subtropical seas. Unlike hawksbills, their diet means they are most often found near seagrass beds, sandy shallows, and reef flats, where they methodically crop vegetation. Divers typically encounter them resting on the seafloor or at cleaning stations where reef fish pick algae from their shells. Endangered; populations have recovered significantly at protected nesting beaches, though ocean plastic ingestion and boat strikes remain persistent threats.

Evidence at this site

130 records within 10 km

Confidence: high

How is this calculated?

Sighting evidence is compiled from iNaturalist observation records within a set proximity radius, filtered for quality-grade observations. “Last confirmed” is the date of the most recent research-grade record. Record count covers a rolling 24-month window. Confidence reflects record count, recency, and consistency of seasonal signal.

Also seen at other sites