Search Nerddpedia

Results for "reptiles"

4 articles found

Nature & Environment

Gecko

Geckos are small, primarily carnivorous lizards of the suborder Gekkota, renowned for their adhesive toe pads, vocal communication, and worldwide distribution across warm regions.

Terra Wild 7 4 min read
Nature & Environment

Chameleon

The chameleon is a highly specialized Old World lizard renowned for its extraordinary color‑changing ability, prehensile tail, and independently rotating eyes.

Terra Wild 6 4 min read
Nature & Environment

Komodo Dragon

The Komodo dragon (*Varanus komodoensis*) is the world’s largest living lizard, a formidable apex predator native to a handful of Indonesian islands and a flagship species for conservation.

Terra Wild 6 4 min read
Nature & Environment

Leatherback Sea Turtle

** The leatherback sea turtle (*Dermochelys coriacea*) is the world’s largest living turtle, a deep‑sea wanderer with a unique, flexible leather‑like carapace and a life history that spans the globe’s oceans. **CONTENT:** ## Overview The leatherback sea turtle, often called the **leatherback**, **lute turtle**, or simply **luth**, stands apart from its chelonian cousins not only by size—reaching up to **2.7 m** in length and weighing as much as **500 kg (1,100 lb)**—but also by anatomy. Unlike other sea turtles, it lacks a hard bony shell; instead its carapace is a mosaic of **oil‑rich skin** and **fibrous, leathery plates** that flex with the currents. This adaptation reduces drag and allows the animal to dive to depths exceeding **1,200 m**, where it can hunt its primary prey, **jellyfish**, in near‑total darkness. Leatherbacks are true oceanic nomads. Their **global distribution** stretches from the icy waters of the North Atlantic to the tropical seas of the Indo‑Pacific, with distinct subpopulations that migrate thousands of kilometres each year. Females return to the very beaches where they hatched to lay clutches of **80–120 eggs**, a remarkable feat given the species’ long‑lived, slow‑reproducing nature. Despite their impressive size and endurance, leatherbacks are listed as **Vulnerable** by the IUCN, and several regional groups are **Critically Endangered** due to a suite of human‑induced threats. ## History/Background The lineage of leatherbacks diverged from other sea turtles roughly **120 million years ago**, during the early Cretaceous, making them a living relic of ancient marine ecosystems. Fossil records show that extinct relatives once possessed even larger, more heavily armored shells, but the modern *Dermochelys* evolved a **lighter, more flexible carapace** to exploit pelagic niches. In the 18th century, European naturalists first described the species, assigning it the name *Chelonia coriacea* before the genus **Dermochelys** was erected in 1801 by French zoologist **Georges Cuvier**. The 20th century brought the first satellite‑tracked migrations, revealing the astonishing **trans‑oceanic routes** leatherbacks follow between nesting sites in the Caribbean, West Africa, and the Pacific islands. Conservation milestones include the 1972 **U.S. Endangered Species Act** listing and the 1992 **International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)** assessment, which have spurred global protection networks. ## Key Information - **Scientific name:** *Dermochelys coriacea* - **Family:** Dermochelyidae (the only extant member) - **Size:** Up to **2.7 m** carapace length; **500 kg** weight - **Lifespan:** 30–50 years in the wild, with some individuals possibly exceeding 70 years - **Diet:** Primarily **jellyfish** (scyphozoans, cubozoans, and hydrozoans); also consumes fish, crustaceans, and occasional seaweed - **Reproduction:** Females nest every 2–3 years; incubation temperature determines sex (warmer sand yields females) - **Migration:** Annual journeys of **10,000–12,000 km**; some individuals travel from the Pacific coast of Mexico to nesting beaches in Japan - **Threats:** By‑catch in longline and trawl fisheries, coastal development, plastic ingestion (especially discarded **plastic bags** resembling jellyfish), climate‑driven nest‑site loss, and illegal poaching of eggs and meat ## Significance Leatherbacks are **sentinel species** for ocean health. Their reliance on gelatinous zooplankton ties them directly to the productivity of marine food webs, while their capacity to dive deep makes them indicators of **pelagic ecosystem integrity**. The species’ **global migratory patterns** connect disparate marine jurisdictions, compelling international cooperation for their protection—a rare example of a single animal uniting conservation policy across continents. From a cultural perspective, leatherbacks have inspired folklore among coastal peoples, symbolizing endurance and the mystery of the deep. Ecologically, they help regulate jellyfish populations, which can otherwise bloom explosively and disrupt fisheries and tourism. Their **unique physiology**—including a **thermal regulation system** that allows them to maintain body temperature up to 7 °C above ambient water—offers valuable insights for comparative physiology and climate‑change research. Conserving leatherbacks therefore safeguards not only a charismatic megafauna but also the broader **marine biodiversity** that underpins human food security and coastal economies. Ongoing projects such as **satellite tagging**, **by‑catch mitigation devices**, and **community‑led nest protection** are critical to reversing the species’ decline and ensuring that future generations can marvel at these oceanic giants. **INFOBOX:** - Name: Leatherback Sea Turtle (*Dermochelys coriacea*) - Type: Marine reptile (sea turtle) - Date: First scientific description, 1801 (genus *Dermochelys*) - Location: Global, with major subpopulations in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans - Known For: Largest living turtle, flexible leather‑like carapace, deep‑sea diving ability **TAGS:** marine biology, conservation, reptiles, sea turtles, migratory species, endangered wildlife, ocean ecology, climate change

Terra Wild 4 4 min read