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Deep mystery: why sea turtles plumb the depths
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-08-09 20:57

PARIS - Researchers say they have figured out why sea turtles that normally feed and breed in shallow water or on land will, very rarely, go deep sea diving: the reptiles are on reconnaissance.

Green sea turtles head to the sea, just after hatching at Guanahacabibes National Park's Antonio beach, in the western Cuban province of Pinar del Rio in January. [Agencies] 

Scientists have long puzzled over why leatherbacks are built to plumb the icy depths.

Imagine someone donning a complete set of scuba gear -- tanks, buoyancy compensator, regulator -- only to paddle about the surface of a shallow lagoon. What's the point?

The mystery deepens. Not only are the turtles equipped with myoglobin-rich blood ideal for stocking oxygen, they sometimes plunge more than a kilometer (three-quarters of a mile) below the surface.

Jonathan Houghton and colleagues from the University of Swansea in Britain conducted experiments to find out why the lumbering sea creatures make these rare forays, and published their findings Friday in the British Journal of Experimental Biology.

The researchers fitted 13 leatherbacks with data loggers which recorded location, temperature, dive depth and duration, and transmitted the information to satellites as the animals surfaced.

Of more than 26,000 dives logged all across the North Atlantic Ocean, only 95 -- less than half of one percent -- went below three hundred meters.

Several theories have competed to explain these out-of-character deep dives.

Some researchers argue that the egg-laying reptiles go below to escape predators, while others speculate they simply want to cool off.

A third hypothesis is that the turtles are on the hunt for deep-sea delicacies.

But Houghton's findings suggest all these theories are off the mark.

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