Promising starts to Floridaâs sea turtle nesting season last year and this year have been thwarted by tropical cyclones traveling up the Gulf Coast of the state.
Both Idalia and Debby formed between Cuba and Florida, and both strengthened as they moved north in the Gulf of Mexico.
Both reached hurricane status, both made landfall in August, and both did so in the Big Bend.
Hurricanes Idalia and Debby both inundated thousands of sea turtle nests up and down the coastline under several feet of storm surge along the way.
That, in turn, inspires hundreds of volunteers with special permits to do the work necessary to decide if the nests are still viable.
âOur teams are still working on post-storm assessments,â said Carol McCoy, a spokeswoman for the Coastal Wildlife Club, which monitors sea turtle activity from south Sarasota to northern Charlotte counties. âWe lost many yellow stakes, but thatâs not to say the nests are gone.â
McCoyâs group looks after Nokomis, where sea turtles nest in greater numbers than anywhere else on the Gulf Coast, south to a small section of Knight Island south of Stump Pass.
READ MORE: Fish popsicles and ice sponge baths: How Zoo Miami cools off its animals
âWe will work over the next week or so to re-measure nests and decide if they are still there,â she said. âOr, if they are partial or complete washouts.â
This year the beaches they volunteer on were thick with the typical turtle nests from loggerheads, greens, and Kempâs ridleys.
Unlike regular years, and like several other turtle volunteers along the Gulf of Mexico, the Coastal Wildlife Club found its first-ever nest from a leatherback, the Big Momma of all females that can weigh a ton and grow to eight feet long.
McCoy said sea turtle moms plan for hurricanes.
âEach nesting female turtle deposits several nests throughout the duration of the nesting season - essentially hedging her bets to make sure that even if a storm hits at some point during the nesting season, there is a high probability that at least a few of the nests will incubate successfullyâ
Hurricane Debby made landfall Monday morning near Steinhatchee as a Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 80 miles per hour.
Rural Taylor County last August also took the brunt of Idalia, which made landfall in Keaton Beach.
Fish and wildlife officials were thrilled last summer when nesting totals broke several records, including 133,941 loggerhead nests and 76,543 green turtle nests statewide in September, which surpassed the records from 2016 and 2017, respectively.
In Southwest Florida, however, the memory of the record-breaking start to 2023âs nesting season is just as memorable as the heart-breaking finish.
On Sanibel and Captiva islands alone, there were more than 1,300 nests when Hurricane Idaliaâs brush-by sent storm surge washing over the beach for hours. That, coupled with warmer temperatures linked to climate change, led to the lowest hatchling counts in nearly a decade.
The original nesting numbers for this year have not yet been posted by the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission. Anecdotally, turtle volunteers say this nesting season was going well.
David Godfrey, director of the Caribbean Conservation Commission, said itâs too early to tell how damaging to sea turtle nests Hurricane Debbyâs romp up the stateâs Gulf Coast will be.
Godfrey said, in general, itâs not that Hurricanes Idalia and Debby made landfall where they did.
âThe Big Bend doesnât get a lot of nesting so thatâs good,â he said. âBut the Clearwater area does, but time will tell as turtle experts assess whether it was damaging inundation or not.â