By Darryl Fears, Washington Post,
6/29/2016
The two majestic loggerhead sea
turtles were dead, and nothing could change that. Like dozens of their kind,
they’d succumbed in the ocean and washed up on Chesapeake Bay beaches, a major
concern for marine biologists.
But two researchers had a crazy
idea: What if they could bring the giants back to life, so to speak. David
Kaplan, a professor at the College of William & Mary’s Virginia Institute
of Marine Science, and Bianca Santos, a graduate student there, went to work.
They stuffed their body cavities with flotation material, stuck them back in
the water and followed their drift in the hopes of finding where loggerheads
are encountering the numerous things that are killing them.
The scientists didn’t laugh
madly. No electricity flashed between poles in a lab. But make no mistake, some
horror was involved. “It’s gruesome,” said Santos. “It’s not the prettiest of
topics. But overall it’s been positive.”
They call them Frankenturtles
because they look like monsters — zombies with eyes missing and mouths shut
tight. Their bodies at launch were still thawing out from the freezer at the
Virginia Aquarium’s Stranding Response Program, which collected the two
specimens after beachcombers spotted them. Two weeks later, the mission to give
their lives purpose is going “pretty well,” Santos said.
Loggerheads are common in the
Chesapeake Bay, with up to 10,000 appearing in its waters each summer to feed.
But the bay isn’t an easy destination for them. Loggerheads encounter numerous
threats across their range and in the bay itself — accidental capture by
anglers, entrapment in plastic junk, boat propeller strikes and sudden drops in
temperature. Animals also prey greedily on turtle nests and tiny newly hatched
loggerheads that die after going astray on their way to the ocean. Those
threats collectively are why loggerheads are classified as a threatened species.
Between 200 and 400 a year washed
up dead in the Chesapeake Bay region around the turn of the century, Kaplan
said. Modifications to fishing nets have reduced that estimate to between 100
and 300 annually today, though scientists worry that the turtles they find are
only a fraction of the overall shell count. “The actual number could be much
higher,” he said.
Santos recently authored a decay
study showing that turtles remain intact only for up to five days after death —
with birds, crabs, and fish picking at them — and might disintegrate before
drifting to a beach. Of those that get to shore, Kaplan said, “many probably
strand in remote or marshy areas where they are unlikely to be observed and
reported by a beachgoer.”
The pair figured that if they
could pinpoint where some of those threats occur most often, they could create
loggerhead safety zones, at least in the bay. So they asked the response team
at the aquarium for a dead turtle or two.
The hope was to use global
positioning systems to track the floating animals and map where the winds and
currents send them from a release point in the bay. “If our model can
accurately simulate how winds and currents act on a dead sea turtle, we should
be able to backtrack from a stranding site to the place where the turtle likely
died,” Santos said. “By knowing the ‘where,’” she added, “we can better look at
the ‘why.’”
Before getting to those release
points, the team had to create Frankenturtles. Two arrived frozen stiff from
the aquarium. One was estimated to be about 20 years old, dead from a boat
strike. The other was a juvenile, age not guessed and its death unknown.
The team removed the inner
organs, which sounds disgusting but doesn’t even begin to convey how wretched
that task was. “In addition to the unforgettable and growing aroma of thawing
turtle,” David Malmquist, a marine science institute spokesman said, “the
creatures are both heavy and unwieldy.” The larger weighed in at 150 pounds,
the smaller at 70 pounds.
The team replaced the organs with
Styrofoam. “We cut up some buoys,” Santos said, “…spread some foam, filled the
bottom cavity with some foam stuff and some buoys.” The first “actually took us
a couple of hours to figure it out.” The second was done in an hour.
“It might seem sort of gross, but
it’s a good way to reuse a dead turtle that would otherwise be buried,” Kaplan
said. “And hopefully, the deployment of our two Frankenturtles will ultimately
help lower the number of turtle deaths in the future.”
Four people were needed to carry
them to a truck, unload them on boats and take them to deep water in mid-June.
The researchers also built two wooden turtles to simulate drift and equipped
those with a GPS. They did the same with a pair of drift buckets. They chose
Mob Jack Bay as a release point between the York River and the Eastern Shore.
“They stayed on the surface of
the water and drifted along,” about five miles per day, Santos said. “The
tracks are still working. We’re hoping to release more, get some more data.”
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