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Species Directory

Loggerhead Turtle

Overview Conservation & Management Science Resources
Loggerheads are the most abundant species of sea turtle found in U.S. coastal waters. They are named for their massive heads and strong jaws which they use to eat hard-shelled animals like whelk and conch. Learn more about these marine reptiles.

Loggerhead Turtle

Caretta caretta

640x427-loggerhead-turtle.png

Protected Status

ESA Endangered
North Pacific Ocean DPS
ESA Endangered - Foreign
Mediterranean Sea DPS
Northeast Atlantic Ocean DPS
North Indian Ocean DPS
South Pacific Ocean DPS
ESA Threatened
Northwest Atlantic Ocean DPS
ESA Threatened - Foreign
South Atlantic Ocean DPS
Southeast Indo-Pacific Ocean DPS
Southwest Indian Ocean DPS
CITES Appendix I
Throughout Its Range
SPAW Annex II
Throughout the Wider Caribbean Region

Quick Facts

Weight
Adult: 200 to 350 pounds
Length
Adult: 2.5 to 3.5 feet
Lifespan
Unknown, but estimated to be 70 years or more
Threats
Bycatch in fishing gear, Changing environmental conditions, Direct harvest of turtles and eggs, Loss and degradation of nesting habitat, Ocean pollution/marine debris, Non-native predators (eggs and hatchlings), Vessel strikes
Region
New England/Mid-Atlantic, Pacific Islands, Southeast, West Coast
Loggerhead sea turtle swimming in the ocean Loggerhead turtle. Photo credit: NEFSC/CFF

Loggerhead turtle. Photo credit: NEFSC/CFF

About the Species

Loggerhead sea turtle swimming in the ocean Loggerhead turtle. Photo credit: NEFSC/CFF

Loggerhead turtle. Photo credit: NEFSC/CFF

The loggerhead turtle is named for its large head, which supports powerful jaw muscles that enable them to feed on hard-shelled prey, such as whelks and conch. Loggerheads are the most abundant species of sea turtle that nests in the United States. Juvenile and adult loggerheads live in U.S. coastal waters, but many adults that nest on U.S. beaches migrate from neighboring nations like the Bahamas, Cuba, and Mexico. 

Loggerhead populations in the United States declined due to bycatch in fishing gear such as trawls, gillnets, and longlines. The use of turtle excluder devices (TEDs) in shrimp trawls, large circle hooks/fish bait in longline gear, gillnet bans, and other gear modifications and reduction in fishing effort have reduced sea turtle bycatch in some fisheries, but bycatch in fishing gear remains a primary  threat facing loggerheads. 

NOAA Fisheries and our partners are dedicated to protecting and recovering sea turtle populations worldwide. We use a variety of innovative techniques to study, protect, and recover these threatened and endangered species. We engage our partners as we develop measures and recovery plans that foster the conservation and recovery of loggerhead turtles and their habitats, and we fund research, monitoring, and conservation projects to implement priorities outlined in recovery plans.

Population Status

Loggerheads are found worldwide with nine distinct population segments (DPS) listed under the Endangered Species Act. The most recent reviews show that only two loggerhead nesting aggregations have greater than 10,000 females nesting per year: Peninsular Florida and Oman. Oman hosts the second largest nesting assemblage of loggerheads in the world, but recent trend analyses indicate this important nesting population is declining.

In the United States, the Northwest Atlantic Ocean DPS of loggerheads nest primarily along the Atlantic coast of Florida, South Carolina, Georgia, and North Carolina and along the Florida and Alabama coasts in the Gulf of America (formerly Gulf of Mexico). Total estimated nesting in the United States is more than 100,000 nests per year.

Loggerheads nest sparsely throughout the Caribbean, on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean (Cape Verde Islands and Brazil), in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, throughout the Indian Ocean in small numbers (with the exception of Oman), and in the North and South Pacific Ocean.

In the Pacific, there are two distinct population segments of loggerheads. The North Pacific Ocean DPS nests only on the coast of Japan. This population has declined 50 to 90 percent during the last 60 years; however, the overall nesting trend in Japan has fluctuated over the last decade. The South Pacific Ocean DPS nests primarily in Australia with some nesting in New Caledonia. In 1977, an estimated 3,500 females per year nested in the South Pacific—today there are only around 500 per year.

The 2009 status review of the loggerhead sea turtle and the 5-Year Review of the North Pacific Ocean Distinct Population Segment of Loggerhead Sea Turtle provide additional population information for this species.

Appearance

Loggerheads have large heads with powerful jaws. The top shell (carapace) is slightly heart-shaped and reddish-brown in adults and sub-adults, while the bottom shell (plastron) is generally a pale yellowish color. The neck and flippers are usually dull brown to reddish brown on top and medium to pale yellow on the sides and bottom. Unlike freshwater turtles and tortoises, sea turtles cannot withdraw their head or flippers into their shells. Hatchlings are mostly dark brown, their flippers have white to white-gray margins, and the bottom shell is generally yellowish to tan.

Behavior and Diet

Loggerheads, like all sea turtles, are marine reptiles and must come to the surface to breathe. Adult female sea turtles return to land to lay their eggs on sandy beaches—they are remarkable navigators and usually return to a beach in the general area where they hatched decades earlier.

The life history of loggerheads involves a series of stages of development from hatchling to adult. Hatchlings and juveniles spend the first 7 to 15 years of their lives in the open ocean. Then they migrate to nearshore coastal areas where they will forage and continue to grow for another decade or more before reaching maturity. Adult loggerhead turtles migrate hundreds to thousands of kilometers from their foraging grounds to their nesting beaches. 

Through satellite tracking, researchers have discovered that loggerheads in the Pacific may undertake a trans-Pacific migration. Hatchlings from nesting beaches in Japan and Australia have been tracked migrating across the Pacific to feed off the coast of Baja California, Mexico, Peru and Chile—nearly 8,000 miles away! They spend many years (possibly up to 20 years) growing to maturity and then migrate back to the beaches where they hatched in the Western Pacific Ocean to mate,nest, and live out the remainder of their lives.

Loggerheads are carnivores, only occasionally consuming plant material. During their open ocean phase, they feed on a wide variety of floating items. Unfortunately, trash and other debris discarded by humans also tends to accumulate in their habitat. Small fragments of plastic are often mistaken for food and eaten by turtles. Juveniles and adults in coastal waters eat mostly bottom-dwelling invertebrates including mollusks, crustaceans, and horseshoe crabs. Their powerful jaws are designed to crush their prey.

Where They Live

Loggerhead turtles are found worldwide primarily in subtropical and temperate regions of the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans, and in the Mediterranean Sea. In the Atlantic, loggerheads range from Newfoundland, Canada to Argentina. In the eastern Pacific, loggerheads have been reported from Alaska to Chile.

Loggerhead Turtle Range.png World map providing approximate representation of the loggerhead turtle's range.

Lifespan & Reproduction

Loggerheads can live up to 80 years or more. Female loggerheads reach maturity at about 35 years of age. Every 2 to 3 years they migrate to breed in the general area where they hatched decades earlier.

In the northern hemisphere, mating occurs in late March to early June and females lay eggs between late April and early September. Loggerheads are solitary, night-time nesters, and they generally prefer high energy, relatively narrow, steeply sloped, coarse-grained beaches for nesting. Adult females lay three to five nests, sometimes more, two weeks apart during a single nesting season. Each nest contains about 100 eggs. The sex of hatchlings is determined by the temperature of the sand—cooler temperatures produce males and warmer temperatures produce females. After about two months incubating in the warm sand, the eggs hatch and the hatchlings make their way to the sea. Eggs and  hatchlings are susceptible to tidal inundation and beach predators. 

Hatchlings are particularly threatened by artificial beachfront lighting, which can disorient them and prevent them from finding the sea. Hatchlings orient by moving away from the darkest silhouette of the landward dune or vegetation to crawl towards the brightest horizon. On undeveloped beaches, this is toward the open horizon over the ocean. However, in areas with artificial lighting hatchlings are disoriented and often crawl landward instead of toward the ocean. Artificial light can similarly disorient nesting female turtles.

Threats

Bycatch in Fishing Gear

A primary threat to all sea turtles is their unintended capture in fishing gear which can result in drowning or cause injuries that lead to death or debilitation (for example, swallowing hooks). The term for this unintended capture is bycatch. Sea turtle bycatch is a worldwide problem. The greatest continuing primary threat to loggerhead populations worldwide is bycatch in fishing gear, primarily in trawls, longlines, gillnets, and hook and lines, but also in pound nets, pot/traps, and dredge fisheries.

Loss and Degradation of Nesting Habitat

Coastal development and rising seas from changing environmental conditions are leading to the loss of critical nesting beach habitat for loggerheads. Shoreline hardening or armoring (e.g., seawalls) can result in the complete loss of dry sand suitable for successful nesting. Artificial lighting on and near nesting beaches can deter nesting females from coming ashore to nest and can disorient hatchlings trying to find the sea after emerging from their nests.  

Vessel Strikes

Vessel strikes are a major threat to loggerheads near developed coastlines throughout their range. Various types of watercraft can strike loggerheads when they are at or near the surface resulting in injury or death. In the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of America [formerly Gulf of Mexico], the number of loggerhead deaths due to vessel strikes are increasing. High traffic boat areas such as marinas and inlets present a higher risk. Adult loggerheads, in particular nesting females, are more susceptible to vessel strikes when making reproductive migrations and while they are nearshore during the nesting season. 

Direct Harvest of Turtles and Eggs

Historically, sea turtles including loggerheads were killed for their meat and their eggs which are collected for consumption and/or sale in some countries. Presently, loggerheads are protected in many countries where they occur, but in some places, the killing of loggerheads and collection of eggs continue to be a threat.

Ocean Pollution/Marine Debris

Increasing pollution of nearshore and offshore marine habitats threatens all sea turtles. Loggerheads may die after ingesting fishing line, plastic bags and other plastic debris, floating tar or oil, and other materials discarded by humans which they can mistake for food. They can be killed or seriously injured if entangled in marine debris, including lost or discarded fishing gear.

Changing Environmental Conditions

For all sea turtles, higher sand temperatures can be lethal to eggs, or alter the ratio of male and female hatchlings produced (via temperature-dependent sex determination). Rising seas and storm events can change beach morphology causing beach erosion which may flood nests or wash them away. Changes in the temperature of the marine environment are likely to alter habitat suitability, as well as the abundance and distribution of food resources, leading to a shift in the migratory and foraging range and nesting season of loggerheads.

Scientific Classification

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Reptilia
Order Testudines
Family Cheloniidae
Genus Caretta
Species caretta

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 04/22/2025


What We Do

Conservation & Management

Since 1977, NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) have shared jurisdiction of sea turtles listed under the ESA. A Memorandum of Understanding outlines our specific roles: NOAA Fisheries lead the conservation and recovery efforts for sea turtles in the marine environment, and the U.S. FWS lead conservation and recovery efforts for sea turtles and their nesting beaches.

We are committed to the protection and conservation of loggerheads by:

  • Working with our partners to ensure compliance with national and state laws to protect sea turtles and their habitats
  • Cooperating with international partners to implement conservation measures and establish agreements, such as international treaties that protect sea turtles
  • Researching, developing, and implementing changes to fishing gear practices and/or fishing gear modifications (e.g., turtle excluder devices in trawl fisheries and using large circle hooks in longline fisheries), and implementing spatial or temporal closures to avoid or minimize bycatch
  • Designating critical habitat areas essential for the conservation of loggerhead turtles
  • Protecting and monitoring loggerhead populations on their nesting beaches
  • Conducting research on threats and developing conservation measures that reduce threats and promote recovery
  • Conducting research  on the species biology and ecology to better inform conservation management strategies and to assess progress toward recovery
  • Working with partners to study and raise awareness about illegal sea turtle trade
Learn more about our conservation and management efforts

Science

We conduct various research activities on the biology, behavior, and ecology of loggerhead sea turtles. The results of this research are used to evaluate population trends, inform conservation management strategies, and to assess progress toward recovery for this imperiled species. Our work includes:

  • Monitoring populations through vessel-based or aerial surveys, nesting beach studies, satellite tracking, genetics and other biomarkers, and capture-mark-recapture (flipper tagging) studies
  • Studying foraging and reproductive behavior to understand demographics, physiology, habitat use, and resource requirements
  • Tracking individuals over time to understand important aspects of their life history such as growth, and age to maturity
  • Evaluating life history, demographic, and population health information from stranding and fisheries bycatch datasets
  • Understanding impacts of change in environmental and ocean conditions on sea turtle abundance, distribution, and demographics
  • Monitoring fisheries impacts and working with the fishing industry to design fishing gear to minimize bycatch during commercial and recreational fishing operations
  • Building capacity and training to share the latest scientific techniques and tools to monitor sea turtle populations globally
Learn more about our research

How You Can Help

Reduce Chemical/Sunscreen Pollution

Reduce Ocean Trash

Reduce marine debris and participate in coastal clean-up events.  Responsibly dispose of fishing line - lost or discarded fish line kills hundreds of sea turtles and other animals every year. Trash in the environment can end up in the ocean and harm marine life. 

Reduce plastic use to keep our beaches and oceans clean—carry reusable water bottles and shopping bags.

Refrain from releasing balloons—they can end up in the ocean where sea turtles can mistake them for prey like jellyfish or become entangled in lines.

Learn more about marine debris 

Keep Your Distance

Keep Your Distance

Admire sea turtles from a respectful distance by land or sea and follow these guidelines:

Don’t disturb nesting turtles, nests, or hatchlings. If interested, attend organized sea turtle watches that know how to safely observe sea turtles.

Never feed or attempt to feed or touch sea turtles as it changes their natural behavior and may make them more susceptible to harm.

Boat strikes are a serious threat to sea turtles. When boating, watch for sea turtles in the water, slow down, and steer around them. If you encounter them closer than 50 yards, put your engine in neutral to avoid injury. Remember, Go Slow, Sea Turtles Below!

Learn more about our marine life viewing guidelines

Protect Sea Turtle Habitat

Protect Sea Turtle Habitat

Beaches are paramount for healthy sea turtle populations since females come to the shore to deposit their eggs into nests.

Keep nesting beaches dark and safe at night. Turn off, shield, or redirect lights visible from the beach—lights disorient hatchlings and discourage nesting females from coming onto beaches to lay their eggs.

After a day at the beach, remove recreational beach equipment like chairs and umbrellas so sea turtles are not entrapped or turned away. Also, fill in holes and knock down sandcastles before you leave—they can become obstacles for nesting turtles or emerging hatchlings.

Do not drive on sea turtle nesting beaches—vehicles can deter females from nesting, directly strike hatchlings and nesting turtles, damage incubating nests, and create ruts that prevent hatchlings from reaching the sea.

Circular graphic showing a sea turtle entangled in rope

Report Marine Life in Distress

If you see a stranded, injured, or entangled sea turtle, contact professional responders and scientists who can take appropriate action. Numerous organizations around the country are trained and ready to respond.

Learn who you should contact when you encounter a stranded or injured marine animal

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Featured News

A loggerhead turtle swims through bright blue water. The surface is barely visible at the top of the frame. A loggerhead sea turtle swimming in a deep blue open ocean. Credit: Adobe Stock
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A responder rescues a cold-stunned sea turtle from a Cape Cod beach. A responder rescues a cold-stunned sea turtle from a Cape Cod beach. Photo courtesy of Mass Audubon Wellfleet Bay.
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An aerial photograph showing a boat and 3 small toy turtles circled in red in the water. These toy sea turtles, circled in red, were photographed using a drone flying at 128 feet altitude. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
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Illustration of a hawksbill turtle with a serrated shell of amber, orange, red, yellow, black, and brown and a narrow, pointed beak.

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Left-facing illustration of a green turtle with small head and a green shell that has black and brown markings.

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Management Overview

The loggerhead turtle North Pacific Ocean distinct population segment (DPS), Mediterranean Sea DPS, Northeast Atlantic Ocean DPS, North Indian Ocean DPS, and South Pacific Ocean DPS are listed as endangered and the Northwest Atlantic Ocean DPS, South Atlantic Ocean DPS, Southeast Indo-Pacific Ocean DPS, and Southwest Indian Ocean DPS are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.

Additionally, the loggerhead turtle is listed under:

  • Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) 
  • Annex II of the Protocol for Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife (SPAW)

     

In the United States, NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have joint jurisdiction for sea turtles, with NOAA having the lead in the marine environment and U.S. FWS having the lead on the nesting beaches. Both federal agencies, along with many state and U.S. territory agencies and international partners, are working together to conserve and recover sea turtles and have issued regulations to eliminate or reduce threats to sea turtles.


Recovery Planning and Implementation

Recovery Action

To help identify and guide the protection, conservation, and recovery of sea turtles, the ESA requires NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. FWS to develop and implement recovery plans which provide a blueprint for conservation of the species and measurable criteria to gauge progress toward recovery.

The major recovery actions for loggerhead turtles include:

  • Protecting sea turtles on nesting beaches and in marine environments
  • Protecting nesting and foraging habitats
  • Reducing bycatch in commercial, artisanal, and recreational fisheries
  • Reducing the effects of entanglement and ingestion of marine debris
  • Reducing vessel strikes in coastal habitats
  • Working with partners internationally to protect turtles in all life-stages
  • Supporting research and conservation projects consistent with Recovery Plan priorities

Two recovery plans have been developed to recover and protect loggerhead turtle populations that are found in U.S. waters. Each is focused on the unique needs of turtles in the various regions. 

  • Recovery Plan for the Northwest Atlantic Population of Loggerhead Sea Turtle 
  • Recovery Plan for the U.S. Pacific Populations of Loggerhead Sea Turtle 

The highly migratory behavior of sea turtles makes them shared resources among many nations, so conservation efforts for sea turtle populations must extend beyond national boundaries. This necessitates international collaboration and coordination. Learn more about international conservation efforts below.

Image
Close-up of a loggerhead turtle swimming away and escaping from a black net with a turtle excluder device.
Loggerhead turtle (Caretta carreta) escaping a net equipped with a turtle excluder device. Credit: NOAA

Implementation

NOAA Fisheries is working to minimize effects from human activities that are detrimental to the recovery of loggerhead turtles populations in the United States and internationally. Together with our partners, we undertake numerous activities to support the goals of the loggerhead turtle recovery plans, with the ultimate goal of species recovery.

Efforts to conserve loggerhead sea turtles include:

  • Protecting habitat and designating critical habitat
  • Reducing bycatch
  • Rescue, disentanglement, and rehabilitation
  • Eliminating the killing of turtles and the collection of their eggs
  • Eliminating the harassment of turtles on nesting beaches through education and enforcement
  • Consulting with federal agencies to ensure their activities are not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of listed species

Critical Habitat

Once a species is listed under the ESA, NOAA Fisheries evaluates and identifies whether any marine areas meet the definition of critical habitat. Those areas may be designated as critical habitat through a rulemaking process. A critical habitat designation does not set up a marine preserve or refuge. Rather, federal agencies that undertake, fund, or permit activities that may affect designated critical habitat areas are required to consult with NOAA Fisheries to ensure that their actions do not adversely modify or destroy these designated critical habitats.

NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. FWS designated critical habitat for the Northwest Atlantic Ocean DPS of loggerhead turtles in waters and beach habitat of the Gulf of America (formerly Gulf of Mexico) and along the coast of the U.S. Atlantic Ocean.

Specific areas designated include 38 occupied marine areas within the range of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean DPS of loggerhead turtles. These areas contain combinations of nearshore reproductive habitat, winter areas, breeding areas, migratory corridors, and Sargassum habitat.

View the loggerhead sea turtle critical habitat map

The U.S. FWS addressed approximately 685 miles of nesting beaches in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi in a separate rulemaking.


Conservation Efforts

Reducing Bycatch

NOAA Fisheries is working to reduce the bycatch of sea turtles in commercial fisheries. Our efforts are focused on documenting bycatch, understanding how, why, and where sea turtles are bycaught, and how to reduce that bycatch. We have developed modifications to fishing gear and practices to reduce bycatch and/or reduce bycatch injuries. We require these modifications in certain U.S. commercial fisheries including gillnets, longlines, pound nets, scallop dredges, and trawls that accidentally catch sea turtles. Measures include:

  • Gear modifications
  • Changes to fishing practices
  • Time/area closures

In the United States, NOAA Fisheries has worked closely with the shrimp trawl fishing industry to develop turtle excluder devices (TEDS) to reduce the mortality of sea turtles bycaught in shrimp trawls. TEDs are required in the shrimp otter trawl fishery and, in early 2021, in larger vessels participating in the skimmer trawl fishery.

Since 1989, the United States has prohibited the importation of shrimp harvested in a manner that adversely affects sea turtles. The import ban does not apply to nations that have adopted sea turtle protection programs comparable to that of the U.S. (i.e., require and enforce the use of TEDs) or to nations where bycatch in shrimp fisheries does not present a threat to sea turtles (for example, nations that fish for shrimp in areas where sea turtles do not occur). The U.S. Department of State is the principal implementing agency of this law while NOAA Fisheries serves as technical advisor and provides extensive TED training throughout the world.

We are also involved in cooperative gear research projects, implementation of changes to gear and fishing practices, and safe handling protocols designed to reduce sea turtle bycatch and mortality in the Gulf of America and Atlantic pelagic longline fisheries, the American Samoa and Hawaii-based longline fisheries, the Atlantic sea scallop dredge fishery, the Virginia Chesapeake Bay pound net fishery, mid-Atlantic gillnet fishery, and non-shrimp trawl fisheries in the Atlantic and Gulf of America.

Fisheries Observers

Bycatch in fishing gear is the primary human-caused source of sea turtle injury and mortality in U.S. waters. The most effective way to learn about bycatch is to place observers aboard fishing vessels. Observers collect important information that allows us to understand the amount and extent of bycatch, how turtles interact with the gear, and how bycatch reduction measures are working.

NOAA Fisheries determines which fisheries are required to carry observers, if requested to do so, through an annual determination. Observers may also be placed on fishing vessels through our authorities under the Magnuson-Stevens Act.

Responding to Strandings and Entanglements

A stranded sea turtle is one that is found on land or in the water and is either dead or is alive but unable to undergo normal activities and behaviors due to an injury, illness, or other problem. Most strandings are of individual turtles, and thousands are documented annually along the coasts of the United States and its territories. Organized networks of trained stranding responders are authorized to recover dead turtles or assist live turtles and document important information about the causes of strandings. These networks include federal, state, and private organizations. The actions taken by stranding network participants improve the survival of sick, injured, and entangled turtles while also helping scientists and managers expand their knowledge about threats to sea turtles and causes of mortality.  

Because sea turtles spend most of their life at sea and out of sight, information learned from strandings are an important way for us to identify and monitor problems that threaten sea turtle populations.    

Within the United States and its Territories, there are three regional networks that serve to document and rescue stranded and entanglement sea turtles:

  • Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of America, and Caribbean: Coordinated under the Sea Turtle Stranding and Salvage Network (STSSN)
  • Pacific Ocean (continental U.S. West Coast): Coordinated by NOAA’s West Coast Regional Office
  • Pacific Islands (Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands): Coordinated by NOAA’s Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center and the Pacific Islands Regional Office

The actions taken by stranding network participants improve the survivability of sick, injured, and entangled turtles while also helping scientists and managers to expand their knowledge about diseases and other threats that affect sea turtles in the marine environment and on land.

International Conservation Efforts

The conservation and recovery of sea turtles requires international cooperation and agreements to ensure the survival of these highly migratory animals. We work closely with partners in many countries across the globe to promote sea turtle conservation and recovery. Two international agreements specifically focused on sea turtle conservation are:

  • Indian Ocean - South-East Asian (IOSEA) Marine Turtle Memorandum of Understanding
  • Inter-American Convention (IAC) for the Protection and Conservation of Sea Turtles

Additional international treaties and agreements that also protect sea turtles include:

  • Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES): Listed in Appendix I, which prohibits international trade of wild flora and fauna
  • Cartagena Convention: Protected under Annex II of the Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife (SPAW) Protocol

Regulatory History

The loggerhead turtle was first listed under the ESA as threatened throughout its range in 1978. In 2011, NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. FWS determined that the loggerhead sea turtle was composed of nine distinct population segments (DPS) that constitute ‘‘species’’ that may be listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA—four DPSs were listed as threatened and five were listed as endangered. The 2009 status review provided the scientific basis to revise the ESA listings.

In 1992, we finalized regulations to require turtle excluder devices (TEDs) in shrimp trawl fisheries to reduce sea turtle bycatch.  Since then, we have updated these regulations as new information became available and TEDs were modified to improve their turtle exclusion rates. TEDs are also required in the summer flounder fishery in certain areas along the Atlantic coast of the United States.

We have also implemented other measures to reduce sea turtle bycatch in fisheries through regulations and permits under both the ESA and Magnuson-Stevens Act. These requirements include the use of large circle hooks in longline fisheries, time and area closures/mesh size restrictions for gillnets, and modifications to Virginia pound net leaders and Atlantic sea scallop dredges.

See all regulations to protect sea turtles

Key Actions and Documents

Actions & Documents Incidental Take

Incidental Take Permit to the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology (Sea Turtles and Sturgeon)

The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology has submitted an application and accompanying conservation plan for the incidental take of Atlantic sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus oxyrinchus), Kemp's ridley …
  • Availability of a Draft Environmental Assessment; request for comments (90 FR 1…
  • Re-opening of public comment period (88 FR 55668, 08/16/2023)
  • Receipt of application (88 FR 43082, 07/06/2023)
  • Draft EA (PDF, 89 pages)
  • Permit Application (PDF, 54 pages)
Notice,
New England/Mid-Atlantic
Published
January 8, 2025

5-Year Review for Northwest Atlantic Ocean Distinct Population Segment of Loggerhead Sea Turtle

In 2019, NOAA Fisheries and U.S. FWS announced the initiation of a 5-year review for the Northwest Atlantic Ocean Distinct Population Segment (DPS) of Loggerhead Sea Turtles. NOAA Fisheries is required by the Endangered Species Act (ESA) to conduct 5…
  • Notice of Initiation (84 FR 70958, 12/26/2019)
  • Northwest Atlantic Ocean DPS of Loggerhead Sea Turtle 5-Year Review
Notice,
New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast
Published
March 16, 2023

Foreign Loggerhead Sea Turtle DPSs 5-Year Review

In 2019, NMFS announced the initiation of a 5-year review for seven foreign loggerhead Distinct Population Segments (DPSs): Mediterranean Sea DPS, Northeast Atlantic Ocean DPS, North Indian Ocean DPS, South Pacific Ocean DPS, South…
  • Notice of Initiation of a 5-Year Review (84 FR 70958, 12/26/2019)
  • 7 Foreign Loggerhead Sea Turtle DPSs 5-year Review
Notice,
Foreign
Published
February 26, 2021

5-Year Review of North Pacific Distinct Population Segment of Loggerhead Sea Turtle

NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services are jointly responsible for the protection and conservation of all sea turtles under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Under section 4(c)(2) of the Endangered Species Act, we are required…
  • Notice of Initiation of 5-year review; request for information (81 FR 70394, Oc…
  • 5-year Review of North Pacific DPS of Loggerhead Sea Turtle
Notice,
Pacific Islands
West Coast
Published
April 7, 2020
  • Current page 1
  • Page 2
  • Last »
  • Next

Incidental Take Permit to North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries (Sea Turtles and Sturgeon)

Incidental Take Permit to North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries (Sea Turtles and Sturgeon)
  • Notice; Issuance of Permit (89 FR 82573, 10/11/2024)
  • Notice of Availability - Draft Environmental Assessment (88 FR 54303, 08/10/202…
  • Correction to Receipt of Application (88 FR 859, 01/05/2023)
  • Receipt of application (87 FR 78659, 12/22/2022)
Notice,
Southeast
Published
10/02/2024

Incidental Take Permit to Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratories, Inc.

Incidental Take Permit to Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratories, Inc.
  • Issuance of permit
  • Notice of availability (environmental assessment)
  • Receipt of application
Notice,
Southeast
Issued
02/06/2018

Incidental Take Permit to North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries for Sea Turtles

Incidental Take Permit to North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries (for sea turtles)
  • Issuance of permit
  • Notice of availability (environmental assessment)
  • Receipt of application
  • Receipt of application
Notice,
Southeast
Effective
09/17/2013

More Information

  • Sea Turtles of the Northeast U.S.
  • Sea Turtles of the Pacific Islands
  • Marine Life Viewing Guidelines
  • Marine Life in Distress
  • Endangered Species Permitting
  • Video: Reducing Bycatch Helps Restore Sea Turtle Populations

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 04/22/2025

Science Overview

As an essential part of our conservation program, NOAA Fisheries conducts research on the biology, behavior, and ecology of the loggerhead sea turtle. The results of this research are used to inform management decisions and enhance recovery efforts for the species.

Pacific Islands TurtleWatch

TurtleWatch is a mapping project that provides up-to-date information about the thermal habitat of loggerhead sea turtles in the Pacific Ocean north of the Hawaiian Islands. By identifying the ocean habitat favored by loggerhead turtles, the TurtleWatch maps are expected to help longline fishing vessels deploy their fishing gear in areas where loggerheads are less likely to occur. In this way, NOAA Fisheries hopes to provide benefits not only to the turtles, but also to fishermen, who operate under strict limits on the number of turtle interactions allowed.

Population Assessments

Sea turtle population assessments ideally include information on the species’ abundance and distribution, life history, and human impacts. This information can help NOAA Fisheries evaluate the effectiveness of conservation and recovery measures, and can help guide actions to enhance recovery. To estimate population abundance, researchers conduct aerial and vessel-based surveys and collect information on turtle’s surfacing behavior.  Researchers also  capture and mark turtles on beaches and incorporate data collected on nesting beaches via stranding networks and from fisheries observer programs. Other information that informs sea turtle population assessments includes population structure (genetic analyses), age to maturity, survivorship of the various life stages (e.g., hatchling, juvenile, adult) foraging and reproductive behavior, movement and distribution, and habitat studies.

Tagging and Tracking Studies

Satellite telemetry allows researchers to track sea turtles as they migrate between and within foraging and nesting areas. Tags are designed and attached in a manner that minimizes disturbance and/or harm to the turtle. The data help us understand migration patterns, identify feeding areas, and identify where turtles overlap with their primary threats (e.g., fisheries, vessel traffic).

Image
Image of a loggerhead turtle being released
NOAA and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologists release a loggerhead turtle with a satellite tag as part of a joint study on sea turtles in Florida Bay. Credit: Barbara Schroeder, NOAA

Research to Reduce Bycatch in Fishing Gear

We observe fisheries to understand the level of sea turtle bycatch and the ways in which turtles interact with fishing gear. We work with partners and industry to develop modifications to fishing gear and/or fishing practices to reduce sea turtle bycatch while at the same time retaining a sustainable catch of targeted species. These efforts include the development of turtle excluder devices (TEDs) for use in trawl fisheries, use of circle hooks and certain bait types in longline fisheries, time and area closures/mesh size restrictions and low profile designs for gillnets, and modifications to Virginia pound net leaders and Atlantic scallop dredge gear.

Learn more about our fishing gear research

Sea Turtle Genetics

NOAA Fisheries’ National Sea Turtle Molecular Genetics Center serves as a worldwide central repository for sea turtle tissue and DNA samples and constitutes a major area of research supporting sea turtle conservation. For example, a turtle’s genetic “fingerprint” can be used to determine which nesting population it originated from.

Learn more about our turtle genetics and isotope studies 

Life History Studies

Life history studies include gathering information on such things as migration patterns, where turtles nest and forage, growth rates, age to maturity, and sex ratios. This information is important in understanding key biological parameters that influence population trends and inform the conservation status.

Research & Data

Novel Behavioral Responses of Sea Turtles to Gillnet Fishing Gear

By using controlled experiments with wild-caught animals, we provide novel insights on fine-scale behavioral interactions with fishing gear.
April 16, 2025 - Peer-Reviewed Research ,
Pacific Islands

Protected Species Gear Research Contract Reports

Publications by Northeast Fisheries Science Center personnel, contractors and collaborators working on gear modifications to protect endangered sea turtles and other protected marine species.
October 24, 2022 - Publication Database ,
New England/Mid-Atlantic

Species and Population Specific Gene Expression in Blood Transcriptomes of Marine Turtles

We generated high quality blood transcriptome assemblies for hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata), loggerhead (Caretta caretta), green (Chelonia mydas), and leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea) turtles.
May 13, 2021 - Peer-Reviewed Research ,
New England/Mid-Atlantic
Pacific Islands
Southeast
West Coast
National

Southwest Fisheries Science Center Stock Assessments

Our stock assessments provide information on the dynamics of fish populations and scientific information to fishery managers regarding stock status, historical and future biomass, and recruitment trends.
West Coast
A pod of long-beaked common dolphins is seen jumping over the surface of the ocean. Long-beaked common dolphin school. Photo: NOAA Fisheries/Adam Ü
View More

More Information

  • Loggerhead Research in the North Pacific
  • Sea Turtle Research in the Pacific
  • Sea Turtle Ecology and Population Dynamics in the Northeast
  • Southwest Fisheries Science Center Marine Turtle Research Program
  • Scientific Research and Enhancement Permits
  • Cooperative Marine Turtle Tagging Program

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 04/22/2025

Documents

Document

Supplemental Biological Opinion on Continued Authorization of Hawaiʻi Shallow-Set Longline Fishery, 2024

NOAA Fisheries issued a no-jeopardy supplemental biological opinion in March 2024 on the agency’s…

Pacific Islands
Document

Northwest Atlantic Ocean DPS of Loggerhead Sea Turtle 5-Year Review

This document is the ESA 5-year review of the species based on the best available data.

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast
Document

Northern Gulf of Mexico Sea Turtle Strandings: A Summary of Findings and Analyses from 2015–2019

The Technical Memo presents information, analyses, and conclusions related to the study of sea…

Southeast
Document

Foreign Loggerhead Sea Turtle DPSs 5-Year Review

This document is the ESA 5-year review of the species based on the best available data.

International
More Documents

Data & Maps

Map

Summer Flounder Sea Turtle Protection Area Map and GIS Data

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Data

Recovery Action Database

Tracks the implementation of recovery actions from Endangered Species Act (ESA) recovery plans.

National
Map

Virginia Pound Net Regulated Area Map & GIS Data

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Map

Large Mesh Gillnet Restricted Area Map & GIS Data

New England/Mid-Atlantic
More Data
More Maps

Research

Peer-Reviewed Research

Novel Behavioral Responses of Sea Turtles to Gillnet Fishing Gear

By using controlled experiments with wild-caught animals, we provide novel insights on fine-scale…

Pacific Islands
Peer-Reviewed Research

Species and Population Specific Gene Expression in Blood Transcriptomes of Marine Turtles

We generated high quality blood transcriptome assemblies for hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata),…

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Pacific Islands
Southeast
West Coast
National

Southwest Fisheries Science Center Stock Assessments

Our stock assessments provide information on the dynamics of fish populations and scientific information to fishery managers regarding stock status, historical and future biomass, and recruitment trends.

West Coast
Peer-Reviewed Research

Movements of Loggerhead Sea Turtles in the Gulf of California

The first study to describe loggerhead movements in the Gulf of California results in data…

Pacific Islands
More Research

Outreach & Education

Outreach Materials

Protected Marine Species Identification Guide Southeast United States

This guide is intended for use by mariners in the identification and reporting of threatened and…

Southeast
More Outreach Materials
More Educational Materials

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 04/22/2025

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