Daily Press

Sea turtles head back to the Atlantic

Hundreds on Outer Banks watch as creatures are released

- By Kari Pugh Kari Pugh, kari.pugh @virginiame­dia.com

BUXTON — Against the backdrop of the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, hundreds turned out Tuesday morning to cheer rehabilita­ted sea turtles as they returned to their ocean homes.

It was the Outer Banks’ first public turtle release since the pandemic, and the response was overwhelmi­ng, said Christian Legner, a spokespers­on for the North Carolina Aquarium at Roanoke Island, home to the Sea Turtle Assistance and Rehabilita­tion hospital (known as the STAR Center).

The aquarium invited the public to come out as caretakers released six turtles near the iconic lighthouse. And come out they did. An estimated 300 people lined the beach as the turtles were released one by one.

Among them was Miss Piggy, an adult female loggerhead brought to the STAR Center on Sept. 15 with lethargy and anemia. Miss Piggy received a satellite transmitte­r and a DNA test before her release. The sample will be compared to DNA collected on nesting beaches from North Carolina to Georgia and will let researcher­s know if she nests successful­ly. The aquarium plans to share Miss Piggy’s track on its website when she pings.

“We don’t normally see adult turtles in the STAR Center,” Amber Hitt, STAR Center manager, said in a statement. “Rehabilita­ting and releasing a turtle that could potentiall­y contribute to the population in the near future brings additional depth to this rewarding job.”

The others released included four green sea turtles that all suffered from cold-stunning over the winter and one Kemp’s ridley turtle that had a hook in its mouth.

Those turtles received small microchips inserted into their flippers to help identify them if they are seen again in the future, the aquarium said in a news release.

The turtle release was a joint effort between the aquarium and the Outer Banks Network for Endangered Sea Turtles, a volunteer group responsibl­e for responding to reports of stranded turtles, transporti­ng patients and helping care for rehabilita­ting turtles. The network also provides sea turtle nest monitoring from Nags Head to the Virginia state line.

“In the winter, releases are often done from boats, so volunteers don’t get the chance to attend. Having the opportunit­y to see six turtles released and have volunteers actively participat­e is very gratifying,” said

network president Tony Parisi in a statement.

If you see a stranded or nesting turtle on the Outer Banks, contact the Network for Endangered Sea Turtles’ hotline at 252-441-8622.

The STAR Center hospital

at the aquarium is open to the public from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily and is included with admission to the aquarium.

 ?? DANIEL PULLEN/FREELANCE ?? A sea turtle is carried back into the Atlantic Ocean this week before a crowd of about 300 near the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse.
DANIEL PULLEN/FREELANCE A sea turtle is carried back into the Atlantic Ocean this week before a crowd of about 300 near the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse.

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