A woman was arrested after allegedly disturbing and stomping on a sea turtle nest in Miami Beach, Florida.
The nest was located in a closed-off area on the beach with a “Do Not Disturb” sign.
“Thankfully, it appears the eggs were not damaged,” Miami Beach police spokesman Ernesto Rodriguez told the paper.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission says that sea turtles are protected under the Federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 as well as under Florida’s Marine Turtle Protection Act.
It notes, “Civil penalties can exceed $50,000 and Criminal penalties can include fines of up to $100,000 and imprisonment of up to one year.”
In 2015, the agency added, a Florida man received 30 days in jail for lifting a sea turtle out of the water.
Another man was fined $1,500 last year for harassing a turtle and a monk seal in Hawaii’s Kaua'i, NOAA also said.
“The man, who was vacationing on Kauaʻi in fall 2017, posted videos of his interactions with the animals on Instagram, a popular social media platform for sharing photos and videos. An officer with NOAA’s Office of Law Enforcement (OLE) in Hawaiʻi used the man’s social media presence to identify his home address, issue the penalty, and educate him about the federal statutes protecting marine wildlife,” the agency wrote.
Adam Kurtz, a NOAA Fisheries wildlife management coordinator, noted that the harassment of the seal could be dangerous.
“Even if they are sleeping and seem harmless, Hawaiian monk seals are still wild animals and they can act unpredictably,” Kurtz said in a statement. “The seal could have lunged at him.”