: For a long time, no one could find where these turtles nested, which fueled the theory that they were sterile hybrids that didn't reproduce.
In different cultural contexts, "turtle" and "bastard" combined take on more derogatory meanings:
: In 1880, it was formally named Lepidochelys kempii after Richard Kemp, who sent the first specimens to Harvard for study.
While it is now recognized as its own distinct and critically endangered species, the nickname persisted for decades.