Saving the World's Most Endangered Sea Turtle
Stranded on Cape Cod beaches, these Kemp's ridley turtles are getting a helping hand from volunteers and researchers
- By Amy Sutherland
- Photographs by Herb Swanson
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Prescott says the population increase may explain why more Kemp’s ridley turtles have recently been found along Cape Cod. When he came across his first one, in 1974, he didn’t know what it was doing there. By the 1980s, maybe ten a year washed in, some of them still alive. Prescott and Murley organized a few people to comb the beaches in autumn and early winter. In 1999, they found a record 278, of which 219 were Kemp’s ridleys. Since then, the center has maintained a corps of about 100 volunteers, nearly all retirees.
“The easy part is finding them on the beach,” Prescott says. “The hard part is the medical treatment.”
After the turtles are bundled up at Wellfleet, volunteers and staffers transport them to a clinic at the New England Aquarium in Boston. The clinic is crammed with microscopes, computers and medical equipment as well as tanks of blue water that gurgle and hum.
“Welcome to the real world, Bud,” a volunteer in surgical scrubs says to a turtle that she plucks out of a box. She lays the seemingly lifeless animal on an examining table. Jill Gary, a biologist with the aquarium, sinks a needle into the back of its neck and draws out thick, maroon-colored blood. Gary squirts yellow antiseptic into the animal’s eyes and checks the cornea for scratches. The volunteer has been holding a monitor to the turtle’s heart. “I’ve had only one heartbeat so far,” she says.
Gary inserts a rectal thermometer into the turtle and the animal springs to life. Its temperature is 53.8 degrees Fahrenheit, about 20 degrees below normal. Gary, however, is in no rush to change that.
When people at the aquarium began treating cold-stunned sea turtles extensively, in the mid-1990s, little was known about hypothermia in the animals. Through trial and error and the testing of various medications, they have figured out how to save about 80 percent of the turtles brought into the aquarium.
Charlie Innis, the aquarium’s head veterinarian, says the animals die if they warm up too quickly. As the turtle’s temperature rises, pathogenic bacteria that have lain dormant in its body also revive. The turtle’s immune system, compromised by hypothermia, isn’t up to the fight. The turtles are also susceptible to fungal infections. The main danger is pneumonia—about 20 percent of the turtles have it when they arrive, and perhaps 25 percent will contract it here.
The biologists have learned it’s best to warm the turtles by about five degrees a day. After each turtle is examined, it is tucked into a square, temperature-controlled contraption that is basically a turtle refrigerator. The temperature is set near the turtle’s core body temperature and turned up slightly each day.
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Comments (14)
i love turtles but we need to help them
Posted by sage on March 21,2013 | 11:40 AM
So sad
Posted by on December 31,2012 | 09:54 PM
i love the turtles
Posted by dominic gale on November 7,2012 | 04:31 AM
it looks so sad.
Posted by heather buchanan on October 9,2012 | 03:22 PM
My 10 year old daughter read this article and wants to do something to help. What can she do?
Posted by Billie Dantzler on September 17,2012 | 07:51 PM
I didn't get around to reading this article until June, by which time I could not help but be struck by the irony of investing substantial amounts of effort and money into rehabilitating endangered turtles that would eventually end up swimming and trying to eat and reproduce in the toxic soup that is now the Gulf of Mexico.
Posted by Elsa Peterson Obuchowski on June 27,2010 | 11:12 AM
The Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico looks to be sitting right in the path of the Kemp's ridleys as they go from Mexico out to the Sargasso Sea.
Posted by David Bunn on May 27,2010 | 10:27 PM
This was an interesting report on a wasteful exercise in futility. There are two inexorable natural laws that apply to all species except mankind: Survival of the fittest and the extinction of species that cannot cope with changes in their environment. The Endangered Species Act is maudlin sentimentality carried to the level of genius, as man himself is one of the endangered. As we consume the nonrenewable resources essential to our civilization the ultimate outcome may eventually be a few hardy survivors scrabbling their existence from the renewable resources with their bare hands as in prehistoric days; only the date is uncertain. I have seen no figures, but I'll guess that there are as many extinct species as extant, and I am quite happy that the dinosaurs, mammoths and sabretooths are no longer with us. Man is the ultimate predator because he is prey only to other men and his needs are exhausting those of the other claimants.
I write this at the risk of assassination by the Sierra Club!
James H. Reynolds
Posted by James Reynolds on May 25,2010 | 09:18 AM
What are the reasons that Kemp's ridley turtles wash up on Cape Cod and not in other beaches?.
Posted by Sheyla Sandoval on May 21,2010 | 11:46 AM
Thank you for telling us about these dedicated caregivers and the progress they are making in conserving sea turtles. The article also made me feel less "odd"! I'm one of those who help turtles cross roads. Once when I had stopped to assist a turtle another motorist thought I, personally, needed help and so he stopped. When I started to run to avoid traffic, he ran, too. Seeing him running after me, a state trooper concluded I was being chased and he, too, stopped. When I sheepishly explained I was just trying to help the turtle, he laughed and said he always worried about them, too. Many people care about the turtles!
PS Remember that great car commercial where the couple helped the sea turtle?
Posted by Rebecca Stevens on May 18,2010 | 12:51 PM
Concerning your article, "Coldblooded Rescue":
All life forms live because of their ability to adapt to their environment, i.e., fit enough to survive. We humans are an integral part of the environment of sea turtles. This article reports another case of well-meaning humans adapting the environment to suit the limited survival ability of the turtles. As the turtles continue to breed, the same penchant for getting stuck in the cape will expand. In simpler terms, these people are making the adaptability - hence the survivability - of these sea turtles dependent on them. What will happen to them in 20, 50, 100 years? It appears that not all migrating turtles get stuck there. Perhaps they have learned to avoid the cape; their offspring will "survive." Are these people helping or hurting the species?? We need to appreciate Darwin's message a bit more.
Many kudos to your excellent magazine.
Posted by Wayne Gonzalez on April 30,2010 | 11:05 AM
I am totally worried about those banana boxes.
THEY USED TO BE TREATED WITH CHEMICALS to prevent importing pests with the product. There may be treated inserts now, like grape boxes have. Even after removal of the inserts, the boxes could have residuals that might be harmful to weakened survivors.
Posted by John H. Salomon on April 29,2010 | 10:29 AM
Terrific article, but I'm unhappy that my paper issue this month was so badly put together that some stories (like this one) had repeated beginnings (duplicated pages), and NO END, so I was unable to finish reading this story in the actual magazine. Thank goodness it's available online!
Posted by Krista Thompson on April 26,2010 | 11:59 AM
Terrific article about the dramatic rescue and rehab of the endangered Kemp's ridleys. The video made me cry to see these magnificent little animals on their way back to the wild, healthy and whole.
Posted by Siu Wai Stroshane on April 21,2010 | 10:47 PM