Turtles on beach
Baby turtle Adult turtle

ABOUT SEA TURTLES

Ancient. Beautiful. At risk.

Sea turtles have been gliding through our oceans for over 100 million years. These remarkable reptiles play a crucial role in the marine ecosystem — from keeping coral reefs healthy to maintaining seagrass beds where countless marine species thrive.


But today, all seven species of sea turtles are endangered. Their populations have plummeted, especially in the Indian Ocean, where they’ve already disappeared from many regions. That’s where our mission begins.

They eat jellyfish, clean up the reefs, support marine biodiversity — and they need us now more than ever

In some areas, their populations have declined by more than 90% over the past 70 years. On many beaches, eggs are stolen and sold to tourist restaurants, while adult turtles are killed for their shells, which are then turned into souvenirs.

ABOUT US

Save Turtle (registered in the EU as Chráníme mořské želvy) is a Czech nonprofit founded in 2017. We work on the front lines to protect sea turtles — mainly in Indonesia (6 places) and Sri Lanka (3 places) — by safeguarding their nesting grounds and supporting local communities.


We also offer global consultancy, run educational programs, and help communities find sustainable alternatives to turtle hunting.

Our Vision

We dream of a world where people love nature, where both locals and tourists understand the importance of sea turtles, and where no one contributes — knowingly or unknowingly — to their extinction.

Explore our team
Our People

What Others Say About Us

"Hana's expertise has been absolutely crucial for our efforts to protect the five species of sea turtles nesting in Sri Lanka. Her team plays a key role in shaping our conservation strategies and engaging local communities. I am deeply grateful for the cooperation with the Save Turtle organization."

Channa Suraweera

Assistant Director - Southern Region, Department of Wildlife Conservation, Sri Lanka

"The Indonesian Embassy in Prague and I deeply appreciate the efforts made by the Save Turtle organization to protect sea turtles in Indonesia. We fully support all their initiatives aimed at environmental conservation. It is a great example for everyone involved in protecting our planet."

Kenssy D. Ekaningsih

Ambassador of the Republic of Indonesia to the Czech Republic

"Save Turtle is not just a project to protect endangered animals; it protects us all from the destruction of the biosphere. It teaches us to appreciate nature and inspires people to travel for knowledge rather than just entertainment. I wish Hana and her team continued success in their vital mission."

Michal Broža

Head of the UN Information Centre in the Czech Republic & Volunteer

HOW WE PROTECT

DIRECT PROTECTION

Our trained rangers work daily on key nesting beaches in Indonesia and Sri Lanka:

  • Relocating turtle eggs to safer areas
  • Protecting hatchlings on their way to the ocean
  • Guarding against poachers
  • Cleaning beaches of plastic and debris
  • Recording data for turtle health and research

Almost 5 million saved baby turtles since 2014 and every day the numbers are growing

Read More
Direct Protection


We protect five species of sea turtles — green, hawksbill, loggerhead, olive ridley, and leatherback — on their nesting beaches. Although sea turtles are protected by both international and local laws, poachers still attempt to steal eggs or even kill nesting females for their meat. That’s why guarding beaches and relocating eggs to safe hatcheries is essential.


In the safety of protected beaches, eggs can incubate for about two months until hatchlings emerge. Clean beaches are equally important: driftwood and enormous amounts of waste can block females from nesting and hatchlings from reaching the ocean.



How and where direct protection works:


A female turtle comes ashore under the cover of night to lay her eggs.

Image 1 Image 2 Image 3

Our conservationists locate the clutch in time and move it to a protected hatchery.

Image 4 Image 5 Image 6

After hatching, baby turtles are released immediately into the sea.

Image 7 Image 8 Image 9

Volunteers often join our rangers to help with beach clean-ups.

Image 10 Image 11 Image 12

Where we operate:

Indonesia

  • Alliance for Tompotika Conservation protects turtles in eastern Sulawesi (Tompotika area).
  • Laut Biru Indonesia works in western Sulawesi (Polewali Mandar).
  • Yayasan Sealam Karya Lestari and Universitas Papua safeguard leatherbacks in West Papua.
  • Sahabat Penyu Loang leads protection on Lembata Island, eastern Indonesia.
  • PAMALI Indonesia guards Denawan Island in southern Borneo, the most important nesting site for green turtles in southern Borneo.
  • Berau, East Borneo: We provide education and community development. From 2017–2022, we also ensured direct turtle protection at Bilang-bilangan and Mataha Islands — one of the world’s most important nesting sites for green turtles.


Sri Lanka

  • Gayan (southern Sri Lanka) protects hatchlings and nesting females on the beaches near Dikwella.
  • Mahesh safeguards turtle nests near Matara.
  • Malitha and Sandun protect nesting sites in Godauda.

CONSULTANCIES

In many places, well-meaning efforts still rely on outdated and harmful methods — like keeping sea turtles in small pools. These practices cause stress, injuries, and premature death.

We work with communities in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Ecuador to offer practical, respectful alternatives:

  • Training
  • Community education
  • Building ethical conservation centers

The effective sea turtle protection is not happening in pools

Read More

Our role as consultants


We provide guidance and training in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and beyond. Currently, our biggest challenge is working with the Ministry of Environment in Sri Lanka to improve conservation practices in rescue centers.


At the same time, we train local people to protect turtles more effectively — for example, we organized several workshops for the coastal guard in Sri Lanka. Sharing knowledge and building local capacity is key to long-term turtle protection.

Releasing chicks - a shocking difference


Sri Lanka monitoring


We work with hotels, resorts, and local organizations in Sri Lanka and Indonesia to connect tourism with real turtle conservation. Together with government authorities and community partners, we provide training, consultations, and workshops to improve practices in turtle rescue centers and on nesting beaches.

Challenges in Sri Lanka


Unfortunately, many centers still keep turtles in small pools, buy eggs from fishermen, or release hatchlings under harmful conditions. Raising awareness among tourists is crucial — only support programs that genuinely help sea turtles.

Sri Lanka Challenge 1 Sri Lanka Challenge 2 Sri Lanka Challenge 3

Ecuador & the Galápagos

In 2023, we also consulted in Ecuador and the Galápagos, working with Charles Darwin Station, WWF, and local NGOs. Together we:

  • Conducted beach patrols and hatchery work
  • Monitored and tagged turtles in the wild
  • Collaborated on education in 4 schools
  • Shared our educational materials across Latin America (Argentina, Mexico, Suriname)


We also addressed local threats: bycatch in fishing nets and predation of eggs and hatchlings by dogs. Education and cooperation with communities are key to long-term solutions.

Galapagos 1 Galapagos 2 Galapagos 3

EDUCATION

We believe change starts with understanding. Our education programs in Czechia, Sri Lanka and Indonesia empower young people to:

  • Understand marine ecosystems
  • Reduce plastic pollution
  • Build a sustainable future

Children are our future, and as well as the planet’s

Read More
Education

Why education matters

We want local communities to understand why sea turtles are essential for healthy oceans:

  • They maintain balance in marine ecosystems
  • They keep seagrass meadows alive
  • They help coral reefs thrive
  • They control jellyfish populations

But our education goes beyond turtles and the ocean. We also teach English, waste reduction, and how to handle materials sustainably. Children learn swimming skills too — helping them feel safe in the water and develop a stronger connection with the sea.

Changing the mindset of adults can be challenging — but the future belongs to children. That is why we put strong emphasis on education.

Education 1 Education 2 Education 3

Where we teach

We believe that education is the key to a sustainable future. We work with children and students in:

  • Lembata Island, Indonesia
  • Sembilan Archipelago, South Borneo, Indonesia
  • Berau, East Borneo, Indonesia
  • Sulawesi, Indonesia
  • West Papua, Indonesia
  • Southern Sri Lanka


From kindergartens to high schools, we bring the beauty of the ocean into classrooms, showing why marine life matters and how everyone can help protect it.

Teaching 1 Teaching 2 Teaching 3

Educational materials

The teaching tools we developed are now being used worldwide.

Materials 1 Materials 2 Materials 3

We’ve even created printable coloring books
and memory games in English, Indonesian,
Spanish, and Sinhala — free to download and
use in schools or at home.

Turtle Decoration
Memory Icon
Working with communities

WORKING WITH LOCAL COMMUNITIES

In areas where turtles are hunted for their shells, we offer real alternatives. Through workshops and training, locals learn to create sustainable products using coconut shells, wood, or other eco-friendly materials — supporting livelihoods without harming nature.

Protecting turtles by creating opportunities for people

Read More

We support local craft workshops. By creating opportunities, we help people see that protecting turtles can benefit both nature and their own communities.

Craft 1 Craft 2 Craft 3
Workshop 1 Workshop 2 Sustainable products

Planning a Beach Holiday?

Here’s How to Respect Sea Turtles While You Travel

Do
  • Support real turtle conservation — the ones protecting wild nesting beaches, not showcasing turtles in tanks.
  • Observe turtles from a respectful distance — ideally on the beach, at night, with a red flashlight.
  • Ask questions before visiting any turtle center. Ethical ones focus on education, habitat protection, and never keep healthy turtles in captivity.
Don't
  • Centers that keep hatchlings in shallow pools. These harm young turtles’ muscles and instincts, leaving them unfit for the wild.
  • Daytime hatchling releases (done for photos). Turtles released on hot sand often die within hours.
  • Any place that lets you touch, handle, or take selfies with turtles. It’s not cute — it’s cruel.

How to Choose a Responsible Turtle Center


  • Prefer tours that involve natural turtle watching, not “turtle shows.”
  • Look for projects run with local communities, trained rangers.
  • Ask whether turtles are kept in pools or released promptly after hatching.

Your money matters. Support places that protect nature, not exploit it.

See our guide for tourists

How Can You Help?

Everyone can protect sea turtles — yes, even from the other side of the world.

Media

Learn more about sea turtles and join responsible tourism

Hanka
Hanka's Interview

Radio Prague International: Czech sea turtle crusader seeks to save species from extinction

Turtle