Leatherback turtles have undoubtedly been nesting on the
Pacific coast of Costa Rica for thousands or millions
of years. During the 1980s it was realized that the
beaches of Playa Grande, Playa Ventanas and Playa Langosta
collectively hosted the largest remaining Pacific leatherback
populations in Costa Rica. Biologists from Drexel University
and Indiana Purdue University began to study the population
and quickly discovered that it was declining rapidly.
The information which had been collected was presented to
the Costa Rican government and collaborative work began to
form the National Park. In 1994 Parque Nacional Las Baulas
was declared with a permanent on-site director and team of
park guards. As development of the region increased, the management
of tourism in and around the park became an important responsibility
for the director and staff. Currently the number of people
who enter the beach at night to see the turtles is regulated
and the park receives revenue from entry fees.
The number of leatherback turtles has decline by 90% since
the late 1980s. However, the trend in the last seven years
(shown in the graph below) is not typical of declining population
but of a population that is stabilizing. Since effective
beach protection started 10-15 years earlier, the new trend
could result from the eradication of poaching when the Park
was established.

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