Feb 13, 2013
(Photo caption-Unfortunately was of group of eastern painter
turtles) |Sea turtles swim near Berlin .
A symposium was held last week in Baltimore to
bring attention to the critical issues affecting sea turtles and diamondback terrapins,
the Maryland state reptile, in the Chesapeake Bay .
Written by
ANGELA HARVEY
Capital News
Service
Sea turtle
number 32 had a small part of its front left flipper amputated last week
because a joint lesion has not healed since the reptile was brought to the
National Aquarium’s Marine Animal Rescue Program in November.
“It’s an
infection in the joint so we don’t want it to spread and then have to amputate
the entire flipper,” said Amber White, a husbandry aide. “As you can image that
would impair his swimming ability.”
The surgery on
Friday went well. Number 32 has stitches in the flipper and has resumed its
normal swimming activities, while stitches on the turtle’s front right flipper
are healing well after a similar amputation was done at the animal care center
in January.
Number 32 was
found stranded off the coast of Cape Cod, Mass. , White said. Its rehabilitation carries high stakes because it is a
Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle, the smallest and most critically endangered species
of sea turtles.
The U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service has determined the Kemp's Ridley turtle's nesting numbers
started declining dramatically after 1947, reaching a low of 702 nests in 1985.
Since the mid-1980s, the number of nests laid in a season has been increasing.
There were 20,800 documented nest in 2011. This increase is attributed to nest
protection efforts and regulations requiring the use of turtle excluder devices
in commercial fishing trawls.
Sea turtles
were in the public eye last week when more than 1,000 scientists, researchers,
conservationists, lawmakers and students from 80 different countries came to
Baltimore for the 33rd Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation,
said Dr. Ray Carthy, president of the International Sea Turtle Society and
assistant unit leader of the Florida Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research
Unit.
The National
Aquarium of Baltimore and the Virginia
Aquarium & Marine Science Center
cooperated on the symposium to bring attention to the critical issues affecting
sea turtles and diamondback terrapins, the Maryland
state reptile, in the Chesapeake Bay .
"The
water quality and health of the Bay affects all of us because sea turtles are
important sentinels of the ecosystem,” Carthy said. “The Bay is an important
foraging and nesting area for turtles, as well as an important developmental
area for young turtles.”
The injuries
turtles endure as a result of many of the issues discussed at the symposium can
be seen at the aquarium's rescue program. It has treated and released turtles
and other marine animals stranded in Maryland
for 21 years. It also is a part of a regional stranding network, so it can take
the overflow from other animal care centers from Maine
to Virginia ,
said Jennifer Dittmar, the stranding coordinator.
The animal
care center has seven juvenile turtles in its care: two loggerheads, two
greens, and three Kemps. All came to the program in November and December after
being stranded in Cape Cod , White said.
The turtles
are being treated for a variety of conditions such as cold stunning -- the same
as hypothermia in humans -- respiratory infections and the exposure of shell
bone, White said. Rehabilitation time depends on the turtle's condition, but
typically lasts five to six months. During their stay the turtles’ energy
levels and respiratory rates are closely monitored and program veterinarians
perform surgeries, ultrasounds, endoscopies and other procedures as necessary,
White said.
The staff
tries to mimic the turtles’ natural environment as much as possible. Currents
are created by the tank’s water system. To replicate sea kelp, car wash strips
are attached to PVC pipes, and little tunnels were made for the turtles to hide
under.
A number
painted on the shell identifies each turtle. Their sex cannot be determined
until they are a little older -- males have longer tails. They have yet to be
named, so White affectionately refers to the group as the brat pack, in tribute
to classic 1980s movies.
Many of the
staff and researchers from the National Aquarium and the program attended the
symposium, where this year’s theme was connections. Carthy said Baltimore was the ideal
location for international conservationists and scientists to meet with federal
workers to share research and discuss protection and conservation policies.
“The sea
turtle community is global, and many of the laws passed in the United States
affect conservation efforts worldwide,” Carthy said. “Having this event in Baltimore allows people
in the sea turtle community to easily meet and exchange ideas with federal
workers.”
The exchange
continued with a teachers workshop,
held at the National Aquarium and run by the Virginia Aquarium’s education
department, that drew about 30 educators, most from Baltimore city and county areas. Educators
were introduced to the lives of sea turtles in the Chesapeake
Bay as they discussed how to educate students about the health of
the estuary.
“We want to
help educators incorporate sea turtles and conservation careers into their
curriculum,” Carthy said, “and it’s personally important to me to target
minorities that are underrepresented in the conservation fields.”
Artwork made
by students from six Maryland schools was
on display at the symposium as part of a contest with the theme of how humans
can help sea turtles overcome threats they face.
In the
Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic Ocean sea turtles
can face entanglement, cold stunning, bycatch, habitat denigration, and
agricultural and industrial runoff causing dead zones, Carthy said.
These are some
of the dangers number 32 will face when it is eventually released. After the
surgery is complete, the program staff will wait for signs that it can hunt and
forge and is healthy enough to return to the wild.
White said
there will be a test.
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