Current:Home > NewsRescuers race against the clock as sea turtles recover after freezing temperatures -Wealth Evolution Experts
Rescuers race against the clock as sea turtles recover after freezing temperatures
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:15:59
Biologists raced to save sea turtles off the North Carolina coastline after chilly ocean waters put the turtles at risk of freezing to death.
"These are turtles that are suffering from cold-stunning, which is a form of severe hypothermia that causes their whole bodies to shut down and basically causes severe hypothermic shock," said Kathy Zagzebski, the executive director of the Karen Beasley Sea Turtle Rescue and Rehabilitation Center on Topsail Island, a 26-mile island off the state's coast. "If people don't intervene, then the endangered turtles won't make it."
The center was bustling with activity on Friday as rescuers attended to the 93 turtles taken in since January, including 35 that arrived on Tuesday.
Many of the turtles rescued by other organizations did not survive. The North Carolina State University Center for Marine Sciences and Technology took in 109 sea turtles, but only 36 survived. At the North Carolina Aquarium, 24 turtles died, aquarium spokesperson Christian Legner said.
At Zagzebski's organization, two turtles did not make it.
"It's been a really crazy week," Zagzebski said.
Most of the turtles taken in by the Center were rescued from Cape Lookout, a seashore stretching 55 miles over the North Carolina shoreline. Park biologists at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore, which spans over 70 miles from Bodie Island to Ocracoke Island, reported in a Facebook post that more than 100 cold-stunned sea turtles were also discovered along the shoreline in just five days since last Thursday.
Although some turtles are cold-stunned as frigid weather chills the oceans every winter, this year has hit them particularly hard. The influx of so many turtles in need of help came after temperatures in the state dropped abnormally low, well below freezing, impeding the turtles' natural migratory patterns.
"That's enough to lower the water temperature enough so that any turtles that have not migrated to warmer water are going to be caught in this hypothermia," said Zagzebski.
Considering that a turtle's preferred water temperature is 70 degrees or warmer, Zagzebski said, any turtles that lost the chance to follow their natural migratory patterns towards the Gulf Stream were in dire straits.
More:How long do turtles live? Here are the expected lifespans for pet, wild tortoises.
Rescuers gradually warm turtles, administer medicine
Turtles in treatment at the Karen Beasley Sea Turtle Rescue and Rehabilitation Center are warmed up over a period of several days and given fluids and medicine to nurse them back to health.
"Some of these turtles were colder than 40 degrees Fahrenheit as their body temperature when they came in, so we're warming them gradually," said Zagzebski.
As the turtles warm up, rescuers give them a daily swim test to check how they would fare on their own. "Some of them just really are failing multiple times," Zagzebski said. "They're really just not strong enough to swim yet."
Rescuers also administer antibiotic eye drops to turtles who sustained eye injuries while they were tossed in the surf.
"Some of them have more severe injuries," said Zagzebski. "Actually, a couple have some old injuries that look like propeller wounds."
In those cases, rescuers rinse out the wounds with sterile saline and give the turtles antibiotics.
Zagzebski said turtles can spend over a year in rehabilitation, depending on the severity of their condition. "There are some turtles that we should be able to release within a month or two," she added.
Zagzebski stressed that beachgoers who come upon a beached turtle should never throw it back into the ocean. "These turtles are cold," she said. "They do need medical intervention by people trying to help them."
In North Carolina, anyone can report a stranded turtle via a 24/7 hotline run by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission: 252-241-7367.
Contributing: Associated Press
Cybele Mayes-Osterman is a breaking news reporter for USA Today. Reach her on email at [email protected]. Follow her on X @CybeleMO.
veryGood! (215)
Related
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Analysis: New screens, old strategy. Streamers like Netflix, Apple turn to good old cable bundling
- Israeli and Hamas leaders join list of people accused by leading war crimes court
- Cargo ship Dali refloated to a marina 8 weeks after Baltimore bridge collapse
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Why Eva Longoria Says Her 5-Year-Old Son Santiago Is Very Bougie
- Anne Hathaway's White-Hot Corset Gown Is From Gap—Yes, Really
- When is the 'Survivor' Season 46 finale? Date, start time, cast, where to watch and stream
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Genesis to pay $2 billion to victims of alleged cryptocurrency fraud
Ranking
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Analysis: New screens, old strategy. Streamers like Netflix, Apple turn to good old cable bundling
- Anne Hathaway's White-Hot Corset Gown Is From Gap—Yes, Really
- Judge cites error, will reopen sentencing hearing for man who attacked Paul Pelosi
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Alien-like creature discovered on Oregon beach
- Should the Fed relax its 2% inflation goal and cut interest rates? Yes, some experts say.
- Former Red Sox pitcher arrested in Florida in an underage sex sting, sheriff says
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Hiker dies after falling from trail in Oregon’s Columbia River Gorge, officials say
Travis Kelce Reveals How His Loved Ones Balance Him Out
Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates says many campus protesters don't know much of that history from Middle East
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
Insider Q&A: CIA’s chief technologist’s cautious embrace of generative AI
Is that ‘Her’? OpenAI pauses a ChatGPT voice after some say it sounds like Scarlett Johansson
I just graduated college. Instead of feeling pride and clarity, I'm fighting hopelessness.