Turkish coastguards patrolling off the resort of Cesme in western Turkey picked up on a single night 152 migrants seeking to travel the short distance to the Greek island of Chios.
Three large dinghies each packed with dozens of migrants were picked up by the coastguards over a four-hour period overnight yesterday, an AFP photographer on board the coastguard vessel saw.
The Turkish coastguard vessel Umut used radar to spot the migrants after they set off from beaches on the Cesme coast bound for Greece.
They were then taken back to the Turkish shore aboard smaller boats and handed over to the Turkish gendarmerie.
More From This Section
Some of the migrants appeared to initially want to resist the authorities but then complied when the scale of the coastguard deployment -- including the Umut -- became apparent, the photographer said.
While the ship was deployed all night, no more migrants were found after 1:00 am, with migrants wanting to cross apparently put off by the presence of the Umut.
In a major operation last week, some 4,000 migrants were picked up in the Aegean Sea.
The European Union wants Turkey to step up its patrolling and stopping of migrants in exchange for a kick-starting of its long-stalled EU membership bid.
The EU has also called for tougher action against the people smugglers who coordinate the movements of migrants, who are from countries including Syria and Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, Turkish prosecutors on Thursday demanded 35-year jail terms for two alleged people smugglers blamed for the death of a three-year-old boy which came to symbolise Syria's refugee crisis, local media reported.
The sight of Aylan Kurdi's body, face down in the sand on a beach outside the resort of Bodrum, caused an outpouring of anger across the world, pressuring European leaders to begin to tackle the refugee crisis.