Sunrise on Turtle Island Borneo Malaysia
Asia,  Malaysia

Ethical Malaysian Wildlife: Visiting Turtle Island Borneo

I rolled my pen across the wooden linoleum, sliding it back and forth over the table top as I glanced over towards the clock. Everyone busied themselves with small talk, knitting, or writing as we patiently waited in the cafeteria after dinner for a ranger to run into the room alerting us of a turtle laying her eggs.

Female Green or Hawksbill turtles can come up to lay at any time so the wait in the dining hall could be anywhere from right after dinner to twiddling our thumbs well into the night. Turtles will only lay eggs in the evening and can be choosey about the conditions of where and when so you have to wait until a turtle finds the exact spot to leave her young.

visiting Turtle Island Borneo Malaysia and seeing turtles lay eggs

Luckily, after only a few hours a ranger ran into the hall and announced, “TURTLE TIME!!!”

Everyone quickly grabbed their cameras and left towards the beach on the far side of the island, the moonlight shining a path along the sand. We quietly followed the ranger and formed a small group behind the large Green Turtle. Earlier in the evening she slowly made her way up from the sea, finding a quiet, dark spot and she began to dig.

Turtle Laying Eggs on Turtle Island Borneo

She uses her flippers and powerfully smacks against the sand as she slowly creates a small pit. When observing them quietly in the dark you just hear the sounds of the turtles digging in the distance. Once the body pit is finished she uses her back flippers and digs a chamber to rest her eggs in, the whole tiring process that can take hours.

Turtles travel over 1,000 miles to the beach where they hatched and navigate there by the earth’s magnetic field. After she finishes laying her clutch of eggs then the ranger collects data and if it’s the turtle’s first time at the beach they will tag her so they can monitor her reproductive cycles.

We moved the eggs from the beach and carefully bury them similar to how the turtle would. They aren’t hard like chicken eggs, but soft, and they look like a bucket of damp ping pong balls. The depth and temperature of the hole can determine the sex of the baby turtles.

After we buried our eggs we headed back to the the beach with a basket of baby turtles who had hatched that evening. Their flippers swing around rapidly as they get closer to the beach sensing the water and are excited to head to their journey.  Once placed on the sand they immediately speed towards the surf, their little legs moving about.  

We all stood in the dark close to the water watching as the adorable babies swam into the dark sea. It is an incredible sensation seeing dozens of babies, only a few hours old This will be the last time they are seen for several years, as biologists are unsure where they go or how they survive during “the lost years”.

Visiting the Turtle Island Borneo turtle hatchery

Visiting Turtle Island Borneo 

Located 40 kilometers north of Malaysian Borneo in the Sulu Sea, Turtle Island is a series of small islands protected by the Sabah Government of Malaysia. In this particular area there are two types of endangered turtles, Green and Hornbill that will lay their eggs on the beaches.

The program was created in 1966 and has several small chalets where visitors can stay overnight and see first hand how the conservation program works. There is a limited number of non-essential personnel allowed on the island at one time, so this ensures that the turtles are kept safe.

You get to spend a full day on the island exploring, snorkeling in the coral reef right off the beach, bird watching or searching for monitor lizards. It was the most peaceful day on the beach I had on my trip.

There are strict rules that are enforced for the protection of the turtles coming up to hatch on the beaches. Since turtles usually hatch at night and will return to the same beach with each clutch of eggs, it is important to keep their nesting grounds safe. Visitors are only allowed on the nesting areas with trained staff. Also, on the evenings when you go to see turtles laying eggs, you are placed into small groups to keep quiet and not disturb the mothers.

Flash photography and bright lights are prohibited, as they will interrupt the turtles as well as distract the baby turtles from going back to into the ocean. Our guide carried a small flashlight to use only at specific times during the process. Being on a beach in the middle of the Sulu Sea at night means you can see some fabulous constellations!

the beaches of Turtle Island Borneo Malaysia

Protecting Our Sea Turtles 

Turtles are endangered due to poaching for meat, eggs and shells and places like this conservancy project help to keep the population from extinction. It’s estimated that 1 in 1,000 turtles live to adulthood.  Borneo Sandakan Tours did an amazing job educating our group while providing us with a fantastic once in a lifetime opportunity. 

If you’re curious about ways you can make more mindful changes with wildlife observation while on vacation, there are a few things you can keep in mind while planning a sustainable wildlife vacation

Exploring Turtle Island Borneo Malaysia  

 

 

 

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