Green Turtles No Longer on Endangered List
- Mark Dworkin
- 3 days ago
- 2 min read
M.A. Dworkin

Caribbean Sea - Green Turtle populations have recovered so successfully that their official status has been downgraded from ‘Endangered’ to ‘Least Concern’ by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species.
Green Turtles (Chelonia mydas) have declined in numbers by between 48 to 67 per cent over the last 200 years, largely due to human influences such as fisheries bycatch, loss and degradation of nesting sites and foraging areas, and the direct take of Green Turtles for their eggs, shells, and meat.
In some locations, particularly islands in the Caribbean, Costa Rica and Seychelles, Green Turtles were hunted to the brink of extinction as a replacement for cattle - both for their meat and their hides, which were tanned into a form of leather.
The species is slow to reproduce, reaching sexual maturity at an estimated 26 to 40 years of age. Although a female can lay 200 eggs per nest, just one per cent of her offspring will survive long enough to reproduce themselves.
The latest assessment found the Green Turtle population has recovered by 28 per cent over historical counts made during the 1970s and 80s.
While the news is undoubtedly positive, the IUCN assessors note that global populations may be at least two orders of magnitude lower than they once were.
The rebound of Green Turtles and other turtle species is a success story for conservation. Overall, turtle exploitation has waned over the years, in large part thanks to scuba diving and other forms of marine tourism and their associated conservation campaigns.
In many locations, including the USVI, measures to protect turtle nesting areas from poaching have been implemented, and specialist turtle hatcheries have been created to prevent hatchlings being predated before they are able to reach the ocean.
Although the overall news is good in the Caribbean Ocean, three of the 11 populations of Green Turtles are still in decline, with populations in the East Pacific Ocean and North Indian Ocean having almost halved over the last fifty years.
Nevertheless, the rebound in Green Turtle numbers and other turtle species is a clear demonstration of what can be achieved through long-term collaborative conservation efforts.
“The ongoing global recovery of the Green Turtle is a powerful example of what coordinated global conservation, over decades, can achieve to stabilize and even restore populations of long-lived marine species,” said Roderic Mast, Co-Chair of the IUCN Turtle Specialist Group. “Sea turtles cannot survive without healthy oceans and coasts, and humans can’t either. Sustained conservation efforts are key to assuring that this recovery lasts.”
The largest concentration of nesting populations of Green and Hawksbill (still endangered) Turtles on St. Croix are found on the beaches of Jack and Isaac Bay Preserve. The Nature Conservancy’s (TNC) sea turtle protection and monitoring initiative, operating since 2001, ensures that these turtles can nest on the shores and their young can hatch safely without facing the threats that have devastated their populations.



