Sea Turtle Rescue: Turtles Head Home

Authored by neaq.org and submitted by Branoodles
image for Sea Turtle Rescue: Turtles Head Home

The release happened between storms on the beach sand of Little Talbot Island State Park. Once placed on the sand, each turtle slowly and clumsily made their way back into the Atlantic Ocean for the first time in more than four months.

The turtles stranded on Cape Cod beaches last November and December due to severe hypothermia after failing to migrate south. All of the turtles also had other life threatening medical conditions, such as pneumonia and emaciation, that required months of rehab at the Aquarium’s sea turtle hospital in Quincy, MA, just south of Boston.

The turtles were driven to Florida as ocean temperatures off of Massachusetts are still in the low 40’s. Sea turtles prefer water temperatures in the 70’s, and north Florida was the closest location with waters that warm. The turtle caravan included the dedicated and talented New England Aquarium staff and volunteers that had brought all of these turtles back from near-death.

In the late autumn of 2017, the Aquarium and its rescue partner, the Mass Audubon Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary, rescued and treated nearly 300 live sea turtles. In their 25 year joint effort, their work has resulted in the release of more than 2,000 endangered and threatened sea turtles in populations that have been steadily recovering.

RvrRchn1 on April 25th, 2018 at 04:54 UTC »

New England Aquarium was always my favorite field trip when I was a kid ❤

smartcool on April 25th, 2018 at 00:56 UTC »

So eager to start crawling and swimming they've got their flippers going while still airborne.

spydermonkiex on April 25th, 2018 at 00:25 UTC »

It's awesome, Jellyman. Little dudes are just eggs, we leave 'em on the beach to hatch, and then — koo-koo ka-choo! — they find their way back to the Big Ol' Blue.