Latest News

Kenya’s battle to protect sea turtles at sea and on land


Kenya’s sea turtles, five of the world’s seven species, are facing mounting threats from poaching, plastic pollution, and entanglement in fishing gear. 

Along the coast, community-led groups and conservation NGOs are racing to save them—guarding nests, releasing hatchlings, and even using photo identification to track populations offshore.

In the cool evening hours at Mtwapa, a team gathers on the sandy shoreline to release turtle hatchlings into the ocean. Sixty days earlier, a female green turtle had come ashore to lay her eggs. Now, with careful preparation, the conservation team sets up a guiding path to direct the tiny turtles to the sea. As the tide recedes, Mike Mwaura Ali bends down to scoop up a struggling hatchling from the wet sand, ensuring it joins the others on their perilous journey.

For Ali, moments like this are more than small victories—they are the culmination of a decades-long calling to protect a species teetering on the edge of extinction.

ALSO READ: Protecting sea turtles should one of Kenya’s key priorities

His journey began in 1995, fresh out of school, when he joined his grandfather as a fisherman. One afternoon, they caught a turtle. His grandfather suggested eating it, citing long-held beliefs that turtle meat cured ailments and boosted male virility. But Ali resisted.

“I couldn’t bring myself to kill it. It was struggling in my hands, and all I could think was—what if this was the last one? My grandfather laughed and told me I was soft, but I knew I had to do something,” he recalled.

That moment planted the seed of a mission. Ali began speaking to fellow fishermen about the importance of turtles, often facing ridicule. The tide of tradition was strong, but he refused to let it sweep him away.

According to KWS, the consumption of turtle products remains deeply ingrained in coastal culture—eggs fetch up to Sh1,000 (USD$8) per clutch, oil trades for Sh1,300 (USD$10) per liter, and carapaces sell for between Sh1,000 (USD$8) and Sh2,600 (USD$20).

In 2008, Ali and like-minded locals formed the Mtwapa Maweni Turtle Project. At first, it was a grassroots effort without funding or recognition, but in 2020, they received official authorization to carry out turtle conservation along the Kenyan coast.

Today, the group has 50 active members, mostly youth, split almost evenly between young men and women.

“Our mission is simple yet monumental: to safeguard turtle nests, protect hatchlings, and nurture community understanding of why these ancient mariners matter. In 2024 alone, we oversaw 22 nests and released more than 8,000 hatchlings into the ocean. The work is painstaking, and the odds are brutal—out of every 1,000 hatchlings, only one survives to adulthood,” Ali said.

Operating on minimal resources, the group reinvests small earnings from sponsorships, community events, and eco-friendly crafts into their work—buying protective gear, building nest enclosures, and funding beach clean-ups. These efforts not only protect turtles but also provide livelihoods.

Kenya’s coastline is home to green, hawksbill, olive ridley, loggerhead, and the rarely sighted leatherback turtles—all endangered and legally protected. Yet threats persist: poaching, entanglement in fishing gear, plastic ingestion, coastal development, and rising seas. Globally, more than half of dead turtles are found with plastic in their stomachs; in Kenya, plastic makes up about 65 percent of beach litter. Fishing gear is equally deadly—over 250,000 turtles die annually worldwide from entanglement, and on Kenya’s coast, more than 80 percent of turtle deaths are linked to it.

Each species plays a vital ecological role: green turtles trim seagrass beds, hawksbills feed on sponges that threaten coral, and leatherbacks consume vast numbers of jellyfish. But survival starts on land, where females dig nests in the sand and lay between 85 and 200 eggs. After 50 to 70 days of incubation, hatchlings emerge at night, guided by the moon’s reflection on the sea.

For the Mtwapa team, protecting nests is a race against time.

“We patrol beaches during nesting season, relocate vulnerable nests, and shield them from human disturbance and predators. Once hatchlings emerge, we clear paths to the sea and ensure they are not disoriented by artificial lights,” Ali explained.

The fight extends beyond Mtwapa. In Diani, a turtle ambassador trained by the Olive Ridley Project- kenya (ORP Kenya) sensitizes her community through storytelling and village gatherings.

“The ocean is our lifeline. When I graduated from the ORP-Kenya at 28, I made it my mission to sensitize the community. Today, people call me whenever they see a turtle entangled or stranded, and many who once ate them now protect them. That transformation gives me hope,” she said.

She added that across the coast, BMU groups are pioneering eco-tourism—organizing hatchling release tours and beach clean-ups that generate income while educating communities.

According to IFAW Marine Conservation Programme Officer Lilian Mulupi, conservation in Kenya has largely focused on nesting females and hatchlings. 

She added that while conservation groups have reliable records of how many females nest and how many hatchlings are released, there remains a significant data gap on turtle populations at sea. 

“Reliable data exist on how many females nest and hatchlings are released, but offshore populations remain a mystery, conservation groups have reliable records of how many females nest and how many hatchlings are released, there remains a significant data gap on turtle populations at sea,” she said.

She added that one of the biggest challenges in turtle conservation is the lack of reliable data and information about these species.

“Without proper records on their populations, behaviors, and migration routes, it becomes very difficult to design effective protection measures. Many communities along the coast also don’t fully understand the ecological importance of turtles, which makes awareness and education just as critical as field research,” she said.

To bridge this gap, ORP- Kenya is pioneering photo identification to track turtles at sea. Diver and turtle biologist Diana Kerubo Nyakundi spends mornings photographing turtles underwater, each unique facial pattern acting like a fingerprint.

“When I dive, I carefully record details such as the turtle’s species, its behavior—whether it is swimming, resting, foraging, or even at a cleaning station—and its size and shell patterns. We approach from at least two meters away to avoid disturbing them, but turtles are very shy, so patience is key. Each photo we capture is scored for clarity, focus, and lighting, then merged into our catalogue. Just like human fingerprints, turtles have unique facial patterns, and once confirmed by our research coordinator, these images are uploaded into the global Internet of Sea Turtles database,” she said.

Since 2018, her work has helped catalogue more than 700 green turtles, fewer than 100 hawksbills, and over 1,000 individual sightings. Each turtle is assigned an ID and logged into the “Internet of Sea Turtles,” a global monitoring network.

According to Leah Mainye, ORP Kenya’s chairperson, the group began in 2018 with diver monitoring and was formally registered as an NGO in 2024.

“The long-term data helps map spatial and temporal trends, enabling identification of high-priority conservation areas and monitoring population structure and habitat use along Kenya’s south coast.ORP Kenya now plans to expand across the Diani area by mapping turtle sites and strengthening protection. When communities learn the role turtles play in ocean health, they become powerful allies in conservation,” she said.

Latest News

Themes