Shell length: about 7 ft
Weight: up to 2 tons
Stomach
300 ft
3 ft
2.3 ft
835 ft
Brain
Salt
glands
Skin Bone
Lungs
Liver
6 ft
4,000 ft
3 in Fat
Esophagus
Ribs
Scute
Vein
cool
blood
Artery
warm
blood
INDIANOCEAN
PAC.OC.
ATL.OC.
SOUTHAMER.
EUROPE NORTHAMERICA
ANTARCTICA
AUS.
ASIA
AFRICA
OREGON, U.S.
NEW GUINEA
12 ,^774 mi
documentedLongest
sea turtlemigration
MAP SOURCES: SCOTT BENSON, SOUTHWEST FISHERIES SCIENCE CENTER, NOAA; STATE OF THE WORLD’S SEA TURTLES (SWOT), OBIS-SEAMAP
FLEXIBLE SHELL
Leatherbacks are the only living
species with unfused ribs, rubbery
skin over layers of connective tissue,
and a flexible shell of bony plates.
The hawksbill is
the only turtle with
overlapping scutes
and serrated edges
on its shell.
HAWKSBILL
Eretmochelys imbricata
Hawksbills’ intricately patterned, trans-
lucent scutes have long been used to
decorate jewelry and luxury items.
OLIVE RIDLEY
Lepidochelys olivacea
The most abundant species exits
the sea en masse to nest, a safety-in-
numbers strategy against predators.
LEATHERBACK
Dermochelys coriacea
The largest and deepest diving
turtle makes the longest migrations
and can weigh up to 2,000 pounds.
Slippery diet
A long, barbed esoph-
agus traps jellyfish and
keeps them moving
into the stomach.
Migration cue
Pale skin lets light into
the pineal gland, which
can track day length
and spur migration.
Archelon (extinct)
This giant that roamed the
seas 75 million years ago had
unfused ribs, like its close rela-
tive, the modern leatherback.
Waxy skin covers a shell
of coin-size bony plates
that can withstand the
pressure of deep dives.
Transferring heat
Blood flowing to flippers
warms returning cold blood,
maintaining a warmer core
than hard-shell turtles have.