Five things you did not know about sea turtle nesting (until now)!

For those who study sea turtles, nesting season often means data sheets, measurements and careful observation. But beyond the numbers lies one of nature’s most extraordinary rituals. Here are five fascinating things related to sea turtle nesting that remind us why these animals continue to inspire awe in scientists and ocean lovers alike.

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Green turtle nesting. Image.
A green turtle nesting in beach vegetation in The Maldives.

Data collection for us sea turtle nerds is sacred – counting nesting sea turtles, eggs laid, hatchlings etc –  it’s information we tend to with great fervour and care. It is this knowledge that powers actionable solutions after all.

But somewhere between all the counting and analysing, we sometimes forget to pause and marvel at the very sea turtles rituals we routinely study.

And you know who reminds us of this sense of awe? YOU!

One such moment came when we hit 28 Million views on one of our videos on Instagram. To our surprise, we had gone viral! With 500 comments, people asking questions, or even just expressing amazement, we were reminded of just how lucky we are to know these incredible animals.

So we present the video to you here, with an explanation in tow, accompanied by other interesting things you may not know about sea turtle nesting.

1) Sea turtle mamas while nesting, will use their back flippers as a scoop to dig a hole as deep as 45-100cms

One of the biggest reactions to this viral video was people expressing surprise at the dexterity of the sea turtle’s flippers. Some even compared the digging technique to an excavator! How could an animal so perfectly adapted to ocean life perform such a precise land-based task?

It’s true that sea turtles’ flippers are highly specialized for marine life – their long wing-like forelimbs provide propulsion and speed, while the shorter and broader hind-limbs function as rudders for steering and balance.

But for females, the back flippers serve another crucial purpose: digging for nests.

Interestingly, sea turtle flippers have a similar arrangement of bones as we humans do for our limbs. A sea turtle’s front flippers have the same bones as our arms and fingers, but their digits are not separated into independently functioning fingers. Instead, their wrist is more flattened and their digits are elongated to form a paddle-like flipper adapted for swimming.

Sea turtles’ hind flippers contain the same basic bones as our legs and feet, but unlike their stiff front flippers, the back flippers remain flexible. Nesting females use them like scoops, curling their back flippers inward to shovel sand out and carefully shape their nests, one flipper at a time.

For an animal otherwise so highly adapted to life in the ocean, this retained functionality of the hind limbs for digging is truly fascinating.

2) Fairy eggs in a sea turtle nest?

Spacer Eggs. Photo.
Smaller yolkless eggs in sea turtle nests are known as spacer eggs. © Jemma Paradise

No, not actual fairy eggs, that would take us from awe to absolute fantasy.

Fairy eggs – if you’ve heard the use of the term in the context of chicken eggs – are unfertilised eggs containing no yolk. Interestingly, these eggs can be found in sea turtle nests too. They’re easily distinguishable since they’re much smaller, containing only the albumen and a shell, lacking both a yolk and embryo.

These unfertilised yolkless sea turtle eggs are known as ‘spacer eggs’, and are believed to serve actual purposes in sea turtle nests:

  • These smaller eggs act as physical spacers, creating tiny air pockets between normal eggs. This improves oxygen flow, which the developing embryos respire and absorb through their eggshell
  • Spacer eggs are often laid at the top of the clutch, potentially acting as decoys for predators digging into the nest
  • Spacer eggs even release moisture to the fertilised eggs, preventing them from getting dehydrated.

Researchers believe these eggs to be a natural byproduct of the reproductive process, caused by factors possibly related to the nesting environment and/or the health of the nesting mother.

So while spacer eggs never become hatchlings themselves, they may still help improve the survival chances of the rest of the nest. Pretty fascinating, right?

3) Sea turtle nests can drown!

Underdeveloped hatchlings. Photo.
Almost fully developed hatchlings recovered from a nest in Laamu Atoll that faced flooding in the last few days of incubation. © Jemma Paradise

While it is true that sea turtle eggs develop buried safely beneath beach sand, that doesn’t mean they’re naturally protected from flooding (from wave action, high tides etc)

Developing embryos inside their eggs, rely on a two-way exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide through microscopic pores in their eggshells. When nests get flooded by ocean tides or heavy rain, this airflow can get blocked, causing the embryos to suffocate. And the longer a nest remains submerged, the lower are the chances of successful hatchling development.

Beach erosion. Image.
A sea turtle nest faces the risk of flooding from beach erosion in Laamu Atoll.

This is becoming an increasingly serious challenge as rising sea levels, coastal erosion, and more intense storms threaten nesting beaches worldwide.

That’s why many conservation organisations, including ours, closely monitor nesting and sometimes relocate vulnerable nests to safer areas when necessary.

4) Is the famous ‘1 in 1000 hatchlings survive to adulthood’ statistic accurate?

Green turtle hatchling. Image.
A green turtle hatchling swimming out into the open ocean in Maldives. © Jemma Paradise

If you have ever engaged with sea turtle conservation, chances are you have heard this statistic before – 1 in 1000 hatchlings survive to adulthood.

This estimate comes from a study conducted over 40 years ago, so how does it hold up now, with more modern methods of population research and study? And the question on everyone’s minds, is this number truly accurate?

Well to begin with, 1 in 1000 hatchlings surviving to adulthood is more a rough guess than a fact.

Interestingly, more recent research by Hays et al. (2026), used up-to-date figures to re-calculate the survival rate, and showed that the real numbers were somewhere between 1 in 400 to 1 in 2000 baby sea turtles surviving to adulthood.

However, the researchers also cautioned that hatchling survival rates can vary widely across populations and species, depending on factors like adult survival rate, number of nests laid per season, conservation management, and threat pressures like bycatch.

So while the popularity of the 1 in 1000 estimate is within the general scale of survival rates, the number is not an absolute. And honestly, that’s one of the most exciting things about science, our understanding keeps evolving, giving us new ways of seeing our natural world.

5) Sea turtle mamas fast for four to eight weeks during nesting

Green turtle nesting. Image.
A green turtle nesting mama laying her eggs in the cover of the night in The Maldives.

For female sea turtles, the process of nesting is so exhausting that most species reproduce only every two to five years, using the downtime to recover their strength.

Before nesting even begins, females often migrate hundreds to thousands of kilometres from their feeding grounds to their breeding grounds. Once they arrive in waters close to nesting beaches, they mate offshore and then emerge on land to lay multiple clutches of eggs over the course of the nesting season.

A single female can lay between two to five nests, returning to shore every couple of weeks across a single season. During this time, she eats little to no food, surviving entirely on the fat reserves she spent months building up at her foraging grounds before the breeding season.

During nesting, she expends massive amounts of energy, and loses a serious amount of body weight – it’s true, the whole ordeal takes a massive physical toll on the mama. But she perseveres, like a she-ro!

Only once nesting is complete does the mama finally return to her feeding grounds to recover and replenish those crucial fat reserves, before repeating the entire process again a couple of years later.

So next Mother’s Day, spare a thought for the sea turtle mama, one of the ocean’s most extraordinary mothers.

We hope you enjoyed these lesser-know facts about the nesting process. If you’d like to help protect nesting sea turtles, here are a few ways you can make a difference: