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Seychelles ‘turtle lady’ recognized for lifelong career in sea turtle conservation |05 May 2016

Seychelles’ expert on sea turtle conservation, Jeanne Mortimer, says that to be recognised with a ‘Lifetime Achievement Award’ serves as motivation to keep at what she has been doing for decades.

The International Sea Turtle Society announced the recognition at its 36th annual symposium on sea turtle biology and conservation held in Lima, Peru, recently.

“They make the award a surprise, so I did not know in time, I only found out afterwards,” Dr Mortimer told the Seychelles News Agency.

“I feel very flattered. I think there are a lot of people doing good work and there are a lot of people who could be given that kind of award. So I feel pleased and honoured that they picked me,” she added.

The International Sea Turtle Society is a not-for-profit organisation whose members are dedicated to the research and conservation of sea turtles around the world.

The Lifetime Achievement Award, given out since 2008, is aimed at recognising individuals who have had a significant impact on sea turtle biology and conservation through the course of their career.

Often referred to as ‘Madanm Torti” or the Turtle Lady, Dr Mortimer has over 40 years of experience working with sea turtles. The American-Seychellois biologist who started her career in 1973 in Central America has been working in Seychelles since 1981.

She says the years she has spent working here have been filled with interesting moments.

“When I first came it was fascinating to get to know Seychelles. I spent five months in Cosmoledo with a dozen fishermen and they were all killing turtles but I could learn from them because they knew a lot about turtles and I could also learn Creole,” said Dr Mortimer.

“I think one of the biggest satisfactions is when Seychelles changed the law that made it illegal to kill turtles and really took onboard the importance of conservation and the need to protect ecosystems in general,” she added.

The turtle lady believes that community monitoring projects that have involved not only foreign scientists but the local population as well are one of the things that have helped the numbers of nesting sea turtles rise from the lows of the time of rampant poaching. She says that involving the local population in turtle monitoring programmes has proven to be an effective model to prevent poaching.

Dr Mortimer is now more involved in freelance work during which she partners with various groups and organisations working to protect sea turtles and promote conservation efforts particularly with the Island Conservation Society.

“We’ve set up a lot of turtle monitoring projects in Seychelles and those kind of keep me busy because I help them to make sure staff is trained and data are collected properly. We can make sense of what they’re finding and we can come up with reports,” she said.

Some of her upcoming plans include to fully developing a not-for-profit organisation called Turtle Action Group of Seychelles (TAGS) she started in 2008 with the aim of bringing all those involved in turtle conservation in Seychelles together. The organisation is currently working on putting up a website with the help of the Environment Trust Fund of Seychelles and Save our Seas Foundation which are providing the funding. Save our Seas Foundation (SOSF), is a not-for-profit organisation with a research station on D’Arros Island.

“Also within the next two years I want to have a national symposium where sites where turtles are being monitored and groups interested in sea turtle education can participate to produce proceedings from that, where each organisation would have their own chapter. But the next step is another book that would be more of interest to the general public,” says Dr Mortimer.

While she is proud of the advances in Seychelles’, which now has the fourth highest nesting population of turtles in the world, Dr Mortimer believes the species remain vulnerable.

She is also happy to see initiatives such as an annual sea turtle festival that is helping to generate an interest in the younger generation.

Dr Mortimer, who has made Seychelles her second home, says she does travel to the US to see families and friends almost every year, but feels Seychelles is where she is really doing something worthwhile.

 

 

 

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