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Why Sea Turtles Are Racing Across the Caribbean This Summer

Why Sea Turtles Are Racing Across the Caribbean This Summer


It starts on a quiet beach. A turtle slips into the surf, and with it begins one of the most compelling migrations in the natural world — and one of the most creative conservation campaigns in the Caribbean.

This is the Tour de Turtles, an annual “migration marathon” created by the Sea Turtle Conservancy that tracks individual turtles on their journey across the ocean. But it’s more than a race. It’s a real-time conservation initiative that uses satellite telemetry, storytelling, and science to bring global attention to the threats facing sea turtles — and the critical role the Caribbean plays in their survival.

When the Tour Happens

Every year, beginning in the summer, the Tour de Turtles releases satellite-tagged sea turtles from nesting beaches across the Western Hemisphere — including a number in the Caribbean — and tracks their migrations online. Each turtle “competes” to swim the farthest over a three-month period, while also symbolizing a specific threat to sea turtle survival: plastic pollution, climate change, commercial fishing, coastal development.

Many of the turtles are tagged on or near Caribbean islands — places like Nevis and the Bahamas — where nesting beaches are not only biologically significant, but also increasingly vulnerable. The data collected during the race offers insights into migratory routes, feeding grounds, and the challenges turtles face in a region where tourism, development and environmental change intersect.

How It Makes an Impact

The Tour isn’t a spectacle. It’s a platform — designed to educate, to raise awareness, and to connect the public to conservation in a personal, tangible way. Each turtle has a name. Each one has a journey you can follow in real time. And each one carries a cause that matters.

It’s also deeply rooted in community. In recent years, the Sea Turtle Conservancy has worked with partners and educators throughout the Caribbean to incorporate the Tour de Turtles into local programming — from school science lessons to resort-sponsored tagging events. Some Caribbean hotels have even backed specific turtles, bringing guests into the conservation experience and giving tourism a stake in marine protection.

Who’s Competing

This year’s race includes leatherbacks, hawksbills, greens, and loggerheads — all species that nest in Caribbean sand and migrate through regional waters. Their progress can be tracked online throughout the summer, and their movements help inform not only scientific understanding, but also policy and protection efforts in a region where turtle populations have declined sharply over the last century.

And so they swim. Quietly, steadily, and with purpose. Across warm Caribbean currents and open Atlantic waters. It’s a race, yes — but the only real competition is against time.

For more, visit the Tour de Turtles.

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