The Turtleman Foundation is donating to Projeto FaunaMar to support sea turtle conservation in Ceará, Northeast Brazil 🌊🐢. The project aims to promote conservation through research and education, with community participation. Activities include monitoring nesting sites, tracking stranded turtles, and implementing environmental education programs at the FaunaMar Museum 📚. Funding will support project activities, material purchases, and team expenses over 12 months. @projeto_faunamar @comissaoilhaativa
The Turtleman Foundation is giving a donation to “Akupara Project” to support sea turtle conservation in Puipuy Beach, Sucre State, Venezuela 🌊🐢. The project aims to reduce threats to nesting sea turtles by cleaning the beach and promoting environmental education 🌴. Funding will support the purchase of educational signs to inform visitors about responsible beach use and a beach cleaning tool 📣. @proyectoakupara @playamedinapuipuyoficial
Microplastics are tiny plastic particles—less than 5 mm in size—that pollute our oceans. They come from the breakdown of larger plastic items like bags, bottles, or fishing gear.
On our beaches, they pose a serious threat to sea turtles, which often mistake them for food—leading to health issues or even death.
In this video, together with our partners at @academiaoceano, we show how we sample and classify microplastics along the shore.
We collect, sort, and analyze these materials with the help of passionate youth volunteers!
The data we gather supports environmental education, scientific research, and conservation efforts—helping protect the hatchlings born on these very beaches.
The Turtleman Foundation is giving a donation to “Academia del Océano” to support the “Kit de Identificación y Monitoreo de Tortugas marinas” (Sea Turtle Identification and Monitoring Kit) project Funding will support a manual writing and publication, artisanal kit for identifying and monitoring sea turtles, and tools and educational materials for workshops . The project aims to promote marine education and conservation through the acquisition of these resources .
Saving one turtle at a time.
Talking about Hawksbill turtles is discussing the reasons behind their endangered status. Their exquisite shells have made them targets for exploitation, leading to their near extinction. For years, they have been hunted for their scales, which are used in jewelry, fashion items, and even musical instruments.
Thankfully, the sale of Hawksbill turtle products is now illegal worldwide. It is crucial for us to help protect these magnificent creatures by refusing to purchase items made from their shells. If you come across any such products, report them to the authorities immediately.
Gilberto Rafael Borges Guzman
Veterinarian with more than 12 years working in sea turtle conservation and research. He is a member of the Handcraft Association and a researcher of different sea turtle projects in Venezuela and Costa Rica.
Social networks: @gilbert_borges9
If you need more information about identifying items made from Hawksbill turtle shells you can use
This App called SEE SHELL, created by (SeeTurtles.org) @see_turtles
Saving one turtle at a time.
This week’s education workshop!
Happy to have hosted students from Mkwakwani Primary despite being young they were very keen to learn about conservation.
We shared our experience and our very own Salim’s Adventure activity books sponsored by The Turtleman Foundation which will assist them in learning more about marine life🐢✍️🏾
#dianiturtlewatch #marineeducation #turtlemanfoundation
Our friends Diani Turtle Watch are anticipating the moment wen the satellite trackers, donated by The Turtleman Foundation, will be placed on two sea turtles. This way, they will monitor and protect them as they navigate the ocean.
On March 6, a hawksbill turtle was found returning to the sea after having nested on the beach of liha do Amor, in the municipality of Camocim, state of Ceará, Brazil. The nest is protected by The Faunamar Project, for the birth of the hatchlings.
The FaunaMar Project @projeto_faunamar is carried out by Comissão Ilha Ativa
Saving one turtle at a time.
The Turtleman Foundation director, Joe Turtle, recently visited the Guangata school in Colombia, South America. The experience was truly unforgettable as the children warmly welcomed him with affection, admiration and gifts. They were dressed in recycled made costumes, and showed him their knowledge about caring for the sea and sea turtles even living far from the ocean.
The community also expressed immense gratitude to him for the eco-mural donation. It was a meaningful gesture that left a lasting impact on both the children and their families. Colombia’s warm reception and love towards the director and his foundation made this visit a truly special and memorable occasion. 🩵🐢
Thank you, Centro de Investigaciones Pesqueras CUBA, for your tireless work. We are glad about the “TUTU, the sea turtle without borders” book donation in Cuba, benefiting schools with children who have visual disabilities.
The Turtleman Foundation has produced a video in English and Spanish to educate about the seven species of sea turtles found worldwide. This video will be accessible on The Turtleman Foundation’s website and YouTube for educational use by anyone interested.
Saving one turtle at a time.
Estamos muy contentos de anunciar que SOA Manabí y la Academia del Océano (Océano de la Academia) ha ganado el 2024 conceder el primer lugar. Este subsidio se utilizará para la construcción de un Océano Centro de Educación. Este centro ofrecerá cursos de capacitación y entrenamiento en la investigación y conservación de especies marinas para las comunidades, estudiantes universitarios y profesionales.
SOA Ecuador Concentrador de Manabí
La Academia del Océano
El ahorro de una tortuga en un momento