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Feds Might Place Sea Turtle Population On Endangered List

Claudia Lombard
/
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/via Wikimedia Commons
A leatherback turtle at Sandy Point National Wildlife Refuge, US Virgin Islands, seen June 16, 2011.

PORTLAND, Maine - Federal marine authorities say they are reviewing the status of a sea turtle that lives in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean to see if it should be listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
 
The National Marine Fisheries Service says it is conducting the review of the Northwest Atlantic population of leatherback sea turtles. The turtles live all over the world's oceans, including off of the mid-Atlantic states, New England and Canada.
 
Leatherbacks are listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The fisheries service says it's collecting comments until Feb. 5 about whether the northwestern Atlantic's population should be included on the U.S.'s endangered list.
 
Leatherback turtles are world's largest sea turtles. They can weigh up to 2,000 pounds. They are also the deepest diving turtle.