What it turned out to be was a 175 pound, female Loggerhead turtle! However, she swam away and was not seen again that evening. But she’d be back….
Joe recounts the rest of the story:
“On Monday morning I headed back to Drummer Cove to see what I could find. The tide was low and I trekked across the mud flats to the small stream that runs through the marsh where I had last seen the turtle. There she was.
Wellfleet Bay staff contacted the New England Aquarium in Boston. Biologist Adam Kennedy came down to the Cape and picked up the seemingly healthy turtle for blood tests and an x-ray back at the aquarium.
As of this post I am awaiting news on the turtle's condition and where and when she will be released back into the ocean for her long swim south for the winter.”
Check out New England Aquarium’s blog post from October 12 that also chronicles this event.
Each fall and winter, typically starting in November, but as early as the end of October, cold-stunned sea turtles are found stranded on bayside beaches. Succumbing to dropping water temperatures, these rare marine reptiles wash ashore—most of the immobile and appear lifeless. Mass Audubon’s Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary staff and scores of volunteers canvass the beaches in search of stranded turtles and send them to the New England Aquarium for rehabilitation.
We thank Joe and Sharon Tatulli for their commitment to this turtle and Mass Audubon. And thanks to Joe for contributing to the blog post and for the great images.
You can learn more about stranded wildlife in Wellfleet Bay’s special Marine Animal Stranding Weekend for adults coming up next month. Click here for program information. Email me directly for a detailed itinerary.
Melissa Lowe
Comments