# They're Out There, You Know: Sea Turtle Sightings and Strandings in Canadian Pacific Waters

**Authors:** Lisa Spaven, Amy Migneault, Karina Dracott, Caitlin Birdsall, Tessa Danelesko, Stephen Raverty, Martin Haulena, John K. B. Ford

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.72513 · Ecology and Evolution · 2026-01-28

## TL;DR

This paper compiles sea turtle sightings in Canadian Pacific waters from 1931 to 2024, highlighting rare species and threats like entanglement.

## Contribution

The study compiles and analyzes rare sea turtle sightings in high-latitude Canadian waters, including new records and human interaction data.

## Key findings

- Leatherback sea turtles were most commonly sighted, while olive ridley turtles had five new records in BC waters.
- Hard-shelled sea turtles were often found dead or cold-stunned, likely due to poor thermoregulation in cold waters.
- 75% of human interactions with sea turtles involved entanglement in fishing gear.

## Abstract

Pacific sea turtle populations primarily inhabit subtropical and tropical waters, making sightings at the edge of their range in colder high‐latitude regions of the Canadian Pacific particularly uncommon and even rare. This paper presents a comprehensive summary of known occurrences in British Columbia waters from 1931 to 2024, featuring demographics, spatiotemporal distribution, and pathological findings. The dataset contains 247 sea turtle records from four species including 77 previously unpublished records. Leatherback sea turtles (
Dermochelys coriacea
) were the most frequently sighted, followed by hard‐shelled sea turtle species: 34 green (
Chelonia mydas
 ), three loggerhead (
Caretta caretta
), the first five olive ridley reports (
Lepidochelys olivacea
), and 54 unidentified sea turtles. Leatherbacks were primarily observed free‐swimming, whereas almost half of the hard‐shelled sea turtles were found dead or cold‐stunned. This difference may be attributed to the inability of hard‐shelled sea turtles to thermoregulate in high latitude waters. Although leatherback sightings predominantly occurred July through October, hard‐shelled sea turtle records were distributed widely across all months of the year. There were 16 records involving human interactions, of which 75% were attributed to entanglement in fishing gear. Given the rarity of these occurrences and the conservation status of most sea turtle populations, these records provide important insights into high‐latitude habitat use and threats, informing future monitoring and recovery efforts for these at‐risk species.

A comprehensive summary of all known sea turtle occurrences in Canadian Pacific (British Columbia, BC) waters from 1931 to 2024, including demographics, spatiotemporal distribution, and pathologic findings. The dataset contains sightings of 247 sea turtles from four species, including the first five records of olive ridley sea turtles (
Lepidochelys olivacea
) in BC waters. Leatherbacks (
Dermochelys coriacea
) were the most frequently sighted sea turtle, followed by hard‐shelled sea turtle species: green (
Chelonia mydas
), loggerhead (
Caretta caretta
), and olive ridley, along with an additional 54 unidentified sea turtles.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Dermochelys coriacea (taxon 27794), Chelonia mydas (taxon 8469), Caretta caretta (taxon 8467), Lepidochelys olivacea (taxon 27788)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Lepidochelys olivacea (olive ridley sea turtle, species) [taxon 27788], Cheloniidae (sea turtles, family) [taxon 8465], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Chelonia mydas (green seaturtle, species) [taxon 8469], Caretta caretta (loggerhead, species) [taxon 8467], Dermochelys coriacea (leatherback sea turtle, species) [taxon 27794]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12848598/full.md

## References

71 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12848598/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12848598