00:00The leatherback turtle, Dermococles coriacea, is the largest of all sea turtles.
00:06An ancient mariner that has crossed the world's oceans for more than 100 million years,
00:11surviving from a lineage that swam alongside the dinosaurs.
00:14This species is listed as endangered under the Australian Environment Protection
00:18and Biodiversity Conservation Act of 1999.
00:23In Queensland, a living leatherback hasn't been documented since 1996.
00:27That's nearly three decades until now.
00:30This turtle was found caught in a drumline at Snapper Rocks.
00:34Despite repeated calls to fisheries, SeaWorld, Marine Rescue, and Queensland Government departments,
00:39every attempt went to voicemail.
00:41After more than 16 hours, the turtle was finally cut free.
00:44For that entire time, we could only watch and record.
00:47Helpless as sharks circled and other marine life gathered close to the struggling animal.
00:53Leatherbacks are global travelers.
00:54They migrate thousands of kilometers each year from tropical nesting beaches to cold feeding grounds near the poles.
01:01They feed almost exclusively on jellyfish.
01:03Their soft, flexible shells allow them to dive deeper than any other turtle, sometimes beyond a kilometer into the dark.
01:10But they are disappearing fast.
01:12Entanglement in fishing gear, plastic ingestion, coastal development, and climate change have pushed them to the edge.
01:21Even the temperature of the sand where their eggs incubate determines the sex of their young.
01:26Warmer sand produces more females.
01:28Cooler sand produces more males.
01:31As global temperatures rise, entire generations risk becoming one-sided.
01:37A silent collapse written in the heat of the beach itself.
01:43Each leatherback is a living relic, a reminder of what the ocean once was.
01:49To see one trapped and struggling against a man-made line is to see the collision between industry and innocence.
01:55Drum lines are not protection.
01:59They are indiscriminate killing devices that do not make swimmers safer.
02:04They trap sharks, dolphins, rays, and turtles.
02:07The very animals that define...
02:09The ocean is not ours to control.
02:19It's a living system we depend on.
02:21We have no right to obstruct its natural order.
02:24No right to destroy what has taken millions of years to evolve.
02:28Let this footage serve as witness and as a call to action.
02:35Because the next time a leatherback reaches our shores, it should be swimming free.
02:40To be here, you are in men'sup
02:59A unique race and square fera in shambles.
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