SEATRU VOLUNTEER PROGRAM
Institute of Oceanography, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Malaysia has done a lot of works in protecting the sea and it wildlife inhabitant for such a long time now.
There a program for those who love Volunteering work called was developed to provide volunteer assistance to the long-term tagging and in-situ egg incubation research and conservation project for marine turtles located in Chagar Hutang Beach, Redang Island. It was introduced in 1998, and has become very popular, especially among college and university students.
There a program for those who love Volunteering work called was developed to provide volunteer assistance to the long-term tagging and in-situ egg incubation research and conservation project for marine turtles located in Chagar Hutang Beach, Redang Island. It was introduced in 1998, and has become very popular, especially among college and university students.
http://seatru.umt.edu.my/
http://seatru.wordpress.com/activities/volunteer-program/
SEATRU is an acronym for the Sea Turtle
Research Unit of Universiti Malaysia Terengganu (UMT). The unit had its
beginnings in 1984 when research on the leatherback turtles of Rantau
Abang was first initiated by the then Faculty of Fisheries and Marine
Science, Universiti Pertanian Malaysia.
Sea turtle research at UMT has since
developed into a multi-disciplinary program aimed at studying all
aspects of the biology and ecology of sea turtles, threats to their
survival, and how they can be managed in order to restore the various
species to a stable population level. The vital information resulting
from these studies have formed the basis for many important
recommendations made by SEATRU to relevant government agencies for the
conservation of sea turtles, especially within the state of Terengganu.
Besides carrying out
conservation-oriented research on sea turtles, SEATRU is also directly
involved in education of university students at the undergraduate and
graduate levels, school children, and the public at large on the
conservation of sea turtles. It also undertakes consultancy projects
which are directly or indirectly related to sea turtles.
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Chagar Hutang is an isolated beach in the
northern most part of Redang Island. It is one of the three nesting
beaches in Redang Island that have been declared as turtle sanctuary in
2005. Universiti MalaysiaTerengganu started the Sea Turtle Conservation
Project at Chagar Hutang since 1993. This project was founded by Dr.
Chan Eng Heng and Assoc. Prof. Liew Hock Chark.
In the early years, all nests incubated
at Chagar Hutang were purchased from licensed egg collectors at RM120
per nest. A total of RM500,000 were spent (1993-2004) in the purchase
alone. In order to support the long-term in situ egg incubation program,
nesting and tagging research, the Turtle Research and Conservation
Group had introduced outreach programs – the nest and turtle adoption
schemes and the volunteer program. The success of this conservation work
had been recognised by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP)
when it elected the former project executants to the Global 500 Roll of
Honour in 2001.
In 17 years since the initiation of the
project, a total of 5,000 green and 101 hawksbill turtle nests have been
protected through the in-situ program. From these a total of
350,000 green and 7,000 hawksbill hatchlings were released to the ocean.
Even so, it is too early to determine whether we have increased the
population of sea turtles at Redang Island. Through the outreach
programs, we are hoping to see some positive changes in the coming
generations to protect and conserve sea turtles.
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