K-5 2009 Social Action Project

Follow Waldo
Take a peek at Waldo's tracking site. This web page not only shows a map of Waldo's whereabouts, it also tells people who adopted and named Waldo -- us, the kids at CUC!

Waldo's tracking site is updated regularly by scientists as they receive her tracking signals. When you go to Waldo's tracking page, you can click on the map to enlarge it. On the enlarged map, you can hover the mouse pointer over each circle to find the date of Waldo's position.

 

Meet "Ralph Waldo Emerson"

Here's Waldo!
We have adopted a leatherback turtle and named it "Ralph Waldo Emerson" after the notable and influential poet, philosopher, essayist, and Unitarian Universalist. This photo of Waldo was taken soon after she was tagged. We will call our adopted turtle "Waldo" for short, since that was Mr. Emerson's preferred name for himself.

And it gives us an excuse to say "WHERE'S WALDO?" as we track Waldo's travels throughout the year. Waldo's nesting grounds are located on the beaches of Gabon, Africa, a country which borders Equatorial Guinea, Republic of the Congo, and Camaroon. Here's a world map. You can see where Gabon is in relation to us at CUC.

Where is Gabon?

Researchers have attached a radio device to "Waldo's" back and are tracking her course through the sea. This helps researchers understand more about how leatherbacks live and what environmental factors are impacting its survival.

In exchange for adopting Waldo, we receive an adoption kit from seaturtle.org which contains:

  • Adoption certificate
  • Information sheet on Waldo
  • Full-color 8x10 photograph of Waldo
  • Sea turtle identification card, not available anywhere else
  • Turtle plush toy

 

Help Us Save Turtles:

Having traveled the seas for over 100 million years, sea turtles have outlived almost all prehistoric animals. Having survived the extinction of the dinosaurs, marine turtles still inhabit the oceans’ open waters and coastal habitats, feeding on jellyfish and other aquatic plants and animals. Critically endangered, the sea turtle is at risk from many factors, including habitat destruction, entanglement in fishing gear, hunting and egg collection, climate change, and pollution.

Save the Turtles

Please help us support organizations committed to turtle research and marine turtle conservation projects. CUC's religious education classes K-5 will be sponsoring fundraisers this spring; monies collected will be donated to seaturtle.org to help pay for research on our adopted turtle. "Waldo" is a leatherback turtle whose population has dwindled dramatically in recent years.

Other sea turtles which are on the endangered species list include the Hawksbill, Kemp's Ridley, Olive Ridley, Green, and Loggerhead turtles.

 

Leatherback Turtle:

Leatherback Turtle Hatchling Leatherback Turtle Click to view larger
Photograph © Matthew Witt

The huge leatherback is the largest of the marine turtles (see photo with human), feeds mainly on jellyfish, and is critically endangered.

 

Hawksbill Turtle:

Newly Hatched Hawksbill Turtles Hawksbill Turtle

This beautiful turtle has suffered serious decline because of the trade in tortoiseshell, which is made from its attractive shell.

 

Kemp's Ridley Turtle:

Kemp's Ridley Turtle

This is the rarest marine turtle, with only about 5,000 adult female Kemp’s ridley turtles left in the world. They nest only a couple of beaches in Mexico and Texas

 

Olive Ridley Turtle:

Olive Ridley Turtles Nesting Olive Ridley Sea Turtle

The smallest of the turtles, the olive ridley nests en masse in spectacular events known as arribadas. These turtles face serious threats from fisheries and development

 

Green Turtle:

Green Turtle Hatchling Green Sea Turtle

Perhaps the prettiest of marine turtles, green turtles are mostly herbivorous. Green turtle meat and eggs are considered delicacies in many countries, so hunting has devastated green turtle populations around the world.

 

LoggerheadTurtle:

Loggerhead Turtles Newly Hatched Loggerhead Turtle

Named for its large head, the loggerhead turtle feeds mostly on shellfish. The loggerhead is the species you are most likely to see in the Mediterranean or Florida, where beachfront development threatens the nesting beaches.