It’s Sea Turtle Nesting Season on Puerto Vallarta Beaches

It’s Sea Turtle Nesting Season on Puerto Vallarta Beaches

While turtle nesting season generally starts in June and runs through December, the busiest time for the beach patrols is between August and September, when as many as 80 nests can be collected every night.
It’s not just tourists that like the beaches of Banderas Bay. Sea turtles love them, too! Puerto Vallarta coast is the birthplace of thousands of Olive Ridley sea turtles and every summer they return to the beaches on which they were born to lay their eggs.

While turtle nesting season generally starts in June and runs through December, the busiest time for the beach patrols is between August and September, when as many as 80 nests can be collected every night.

Normally the eggs would incubate in the sand, but recreational activities on Vallarta’s beaches make them dangerous places for baby turtles, so professional marine biologists and trained personnel from the city’s Department of Environment and Ecology conduct nightly beach patrols in search of turtle nests.

When one is found, they carefully gather the eggs and transport them, still in their nests, to local sea turtle nurseries for incubation.

While turtle nesting season generally starts in June and runs through December (sometimes January), the busiest time for the beach patrols is between August and September, when as many as 80 nests can be collected every night. On average, 100 eggs are deposited in each nest, of which around 85% are incubated successfully.

According to biologist Helios Hernández Hurtado, who is also the deputy director of the municipal government’s Department of Environment and Ecology, it is necessary to recover the eggs almost immediately – before natural predators have a chance to destroy the nest.

As we are now in the height of sea turtle season, there will be lots of sea turtles out searching for a place to nest along the shores of Banderas Bay. So, should you encounter a female making its way toward the beach to lay her eggs, here’s how you can help:

• If you see a turtle nesting, report it to the Department of Environment and Ecology, by calling 322-224-9121, or dialing 911.