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  • #3 - The Power of We

    Welcome to the third issue of SHIFT magazine! In this issue we explore people-power, the ‘power of one’ that each of us possesses to make a difference. An exploration of our strengths and weaknesses, our assets and flaws, and our strides despite our setbacks, this issue is an honest celebration of ‘the power of we’.
  • About the Author:

    Sean Crawley

    Sean Crawley

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  • In this Issue:

    • Letter from the SHIFT team #3

      letter from the editor
    • The Critically Endangered Species File:  Leatherback Turtle

      SHIFT-magazine #0005 thumbnail -_MURRAY COD
    • Sustainable Thinking… Pass It On!

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_Sustainable Thinking, Pass it On
    • Changemaker profile: The Communicator

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_David Rovics - Changemakers Profile
    • A Complex Predicament: Part III – The Ecological Predicament

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_A COMPLEX PREDICAMENT - part 3
    • Top 10: Activist Superpowers

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_Activist Superpowers
    • Going Beyond Coal: A People-Powered Movement

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_Going Beyond Coal - A People-Powered Movement
    • Farewell Michael Ruppert, and Thank You

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_Michael Rupert
    • When Surrender Means Not Giving Up: The New Sacred Activism

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_The New Sacred Activism
    • The Tyranny of “Me”?

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_The Human Race - The Tyrany of Me
    • Activism and the Gifts of Imperfection

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_Activism and the Gfts of Imperfection
    • The Politics of the Pursuit of Happiness

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_The Politics of the Pursuit of Happiness
    • Where Collapse Meets Radical Politics

      SHIFT-magazine #0003 thumbnail_Where Collapse  Meets Radical Pollitics
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SHIFT-magazine #0005 thumbnail -_MURRAY COD

The Critically Endangered Species File:  Leatherback Turtle


Each issue of SHIFT will present one species of life that is classified as critically endangered, Homo sapiens excluded. By definition, whether it be by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), or your nation state’s environmental governance structure such as the Department of the Environment in Australia, critically endangered essentially means that the species is facing an extremely high risk of extinction in the wild in the immediate future.

leatherback turtle 2Common Names: Leatherback, Leatherback Sea Turtle, Leathery Turtle, Luth, Trunkback Turtle, Trunk Turtle, Coffin-back

Species: Dermochelys coriacea

Range: Leatherback turtles are found around the world

Coastal nesting sites may be tropical/subtropical, but foraging range extends into sub-polar oceans

Threats:

  • Loss and degradation of nesting habitat
  • Oil spills and marine pollution
  • Ocean plastic
  • Fishing bycatch
  • Poaching
  • Global warming
  • Disease

Further Considerations:

Though comprehensive data is sadly lacking, all evidence available demonstrates this species is in dramatic decline. Some data quote global populations in 35,800 adult females in 2004, a massive decline from the 1982 figure of 115,000. In the Pacific, where numbers have declined the most, estimates are that there has been an 80 – 95% decline in numbers over the last 20 years.

This turtle is a truly global animal. Its conservation can be justified, as with any species, on biodiversity grounds. But perhaps another unique reason for humans to increase efforts to save this species is that it is a major consumer of jellyfish. The recent evidence of jellyfish blooms, and the threat they pose to the health of the oceans, surely provides grounds for protecting the leatherback and other turtles from disappearing from the ocean ecosystem.

Plastic waste – particularly degrading plastic bags – is mistaken as food by these turtles. Images of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, created by humankind with the assistance of the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, should embarrass every one of us. The simplest action you can take as an individual is to eradicate plastic bag usage.

Some of the many programs to save the world’s largest sea turtles, that have been around for 65 million years, can be found at:

  • http://www.costaricaturtles.org/costa_new_leatherback.html
  • http://saveourleatherbacks.org/
  • http://www.leatherback.org/
  • http://www.wcs.org/saving-wildlife/ocean-giants/leatherback-sea-turtle.aspx
  • http://wwf.panda.org/what_we_do/endangered_species/marine_turtles/leatherback_turtle/
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