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Wellington Zoo Olive Ridley Sea Turtle temporarily at Wellington

Discussion in 'New Zealand' started by Nisha, 12 Jul 2015.

  1. Nisha

    Nisha Well-Known Member 10+ year member

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    An endangered Olive Ridley Sea Turtle is being temporarily cared for at Wellington Zoo following its discovery in a critical condition:

    An endangered sea turtle which is believed to have been caught in strong currents before it was washed up on a Wellington beach on Saturday remains in a critical condition at Wellington Zoo.

    The endangered olive ridley sea turtle received a full health assessment at The Nest at Wellington Zoo yesterday.

    The turtle was discovered by members of the community at Lyall Bay Beach in Wellington on Saturday.

    Normally found in warm tropical waters, Wellington Zoo spokeswoman Libby Callander said the turtle was suffering from hypothermia, as well as shell damage, and dehydration.

    There were also concerns the turtle may be suffering from pneumonia.

    "For turtles, their shell is actually part of their body, and shell damage had exposed some of the bone which leaves a high risk of infection.


    "It's still in a critical condition, which means it has a 50-50 chance [of survival]."

    The turtle, which weighs 25kg, was now resting up in a temperature controlled tank.

    "What they are doing to measure its temperature is measuring the temperature of the pool they are keeping it in, which is being kept at a constant temperature.

    "They would usually be found in temperatures that are 25C to 27C, so as long as the pool is being kept at that temperature the turtle will be in a much more comfortable environment than when it was first found."

    X-rays taken as part of yesterday's health assessment showed the turtles lungs were clear.

    "The lungs are clear, but pneumonia is really hard to detect in the early stages so they have administered some antibiotics to ward it off essentially.

    "Reptiles do take a long time to recover from anything that is going on, so it will take a little while before we know what is going to happen."

    Ms Callander said it was rare to see a turtle in such cold waters at this time of year.

    "Even in the past New Zealand hasn't seen many of these turtles on its shores, they're usually much further north."

    She said they were unsure as to how the turtle ended up in New Zealand waters.

    "We think that it might have been caught in a strong current that it wasn't able to swim out of. That may mean it may have had an underlying health issue already, or it might just mean that it is a juvenile turtle that just wasn't strong enough to get out of the current."

    Vets at Wellington Zoo believed the turtle was female, and would name her Ridley, as she was an olive ridley sea turtle, Ms Callander said.

    Ms Callander said vets would continue to try and stabilise the turtle's condition, before working with other conservation agencies to organise rehabilitation and release.

    "We don't have the facilities to get it rehabilitated -- we can get it medically fit and we can look after it at that point, but once it's going well it will need to be in a warm water pool so it can swim around and we just don't have that at the zoo."

    Endangered sea turtle in critical condition - National - NZ Herald News
     
  2. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    in early August the turtle was sent up to Kelly Tarltons in Auckland, and will eventually be re-released back into the wild.

    Wellington Zoo - Olive Ridley Sea Turtle heads north