Using DNA to protect sea turtles

© Antonio Busiello/WWF-US
Illegal trade poses an enormous threat to sea turtles, which are trafficked for their meat, eggs, shells, and other parts. And stopping it isn’t easy. Because sea turtles generally venture thousands of miles from their nesting sites to their foraging grounds, researchers struggle to identify which populations are targeted and where they’re most at risk. But now WWF’s ShellBank, the world’s first global database of sea turtle DNA, is helping to disrupt that illicit international trade.
Female sea turtles return to the same beach where they hatched to lay eggs, passing along a genetic signature unique to each nesting population. By extracting that DNA from seized turtles or turtle products and matching it to ShellBank’s reference database—comprised of samples from sea turtles and confiscated items—authorities can track and trace trade routes and trafficked turtles’ origins. That data can help identify poaching hotspots and determine where to increase conservation efforts.
As ShellBank’s database grows and evolves, its creators hope the resource will also help pinpoint which populations are impacted by bycatch and overexploitation, enabling better monitoring and protection of these ecologically important marine species.
The ShellBank database includes >13,000 samples from more than 50 countries
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6 out of 7 Sea turtle species threatened with extinction
This is mainly due to bycatch, overexploitation, pollution, climate change impacts, and illegal trade
Green
Chelonia mydas
Olive Ridley
Lepidochelys olivacea
Loggerhead
Caretta caretta
Hawksbill
Eretmochelys imbricata
Leatherback
Dermochelys coriacea
Kemp's Ridley
Lepidochelys kempii
Flatback*
Natator depressus
*Only flatback sea turtles are not listed as threatened by the IUCN, since there’s insufficient data to assess the species’ risk of extinction.
Over the past 30 years, at least 1.1 million sea turtles (excluding shell products and eggs) have been illegally exploited in 65 countries; 22% of those sea turtles were likely traded internationally.

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