Tens of thousands of endangered sea turtles die every year in the United States when they are inadvertently snared in shrimp nets, an environmental group alleges, filing a lawsuit Wednesday against the government

Tens of thousands of endangered sea turtles die every year in the United States when they are inadvertently snared in shrimp nets, an environmental group alleges, filing a lawsuit Wednesday against the government.

The Southeast shrimp trawl industry, the largest in the United States, kills some 53,000 of the turtles each year in the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean, the advocacy group Oceana said.

"If people knew that their order of shrimp cocktail came with a side of government-authorized sea turtle they would be horrified," said Oceana assistant general counsel Eric Bilsky.

The group has pressed for wider use of turtle excluder devices (TEDs), which are flaps built into and big enough for turtles to escape through.

"Studies have shown TEDs are 97 percent effective at preventing sea turtle deaths when used correctly, yet the Fisheries Service is not enforcing their use, or even requiring TEDs in all vessels that can use them," Bilsky added.

In the lawsuit, Oceana alleges that the National Marine Fisheries Service has "violated the Endangered Species Act by failing to determine whether shrimp fishing in this region puts at risk of extinction, failing to monitor fishing's impacts on sea turtles and failing to set a limit on how many sea turtles can be caught and killed," said a statement.

Named in the lawsuit are Penny Pritzker, secretary of the US Department of Commerce; the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the National Marine Fisheries Service, which is part of NOAA.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service proposed changing the status of green sea turtles, seen here, from endangered to threatened, on the basis that their populations have rebounded due to successful conservation efforts

An NOAA media representative contacted by AFP said she could not discuss ongoing litigation.

The lawsuit refers to loggerhead, green, leatherback, hawksbill and Kemp's ridley sea turtles, and says that shrimp trawlers in the southeastern United States kill more per year than all other US Atlantic fisheries combined.

Last month, the US Fish and Wildlife Service proposed changing the status of green sea turtles in Florida and Mexico from endangered to threatened, on the basis that their populations have rebounded due to successful conservation efforts and the widespread use of fishing nets that allow them to escape.

'Drastic non-compliance'

But not all fisheries are required to use nets with turtle excluder devices.

Some skimmer trawls that operate in shallow waters have argued to the federal government that they work effectively without nets containing TEDs, and so they are exempted from using them.

The lawsuit refers to loggerhead, seen here, green, leatherback, hawksbill and Kemp's ridley sea turtles

The National Marine Fisheries Services said on its website that it "does not require a skimmer trawl to have a TED because the nets can be emptied frequently while continuing to fish."

These exempted skimmer trawls are supposed to drag their nets for shorter periods of time and empty them as often as every 30 minutes—as opposed to two or more hours—to lower the risk of drowning any sea turtles that may get caught.

But the lack of monitoring has worried some wildlife experts, Oceana marine scientist Amanda Keledjian told AFP.

"That is a significant problem that we are very concerned about," she said.

"TEDs are required in most circumstances for the shrimp trawl fishery, but when they are allowed to do something different, they are really in drastic non-compliance with some of those requirements, which is frustrating."