Georgia Sea Turtle Center
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Nov 28

Lecture Series – November!

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It is Easy Being Green!

So what’s all the hype about going green?  What exactly does it mean and should you be concerned?  Come learn about what going green really means and simple ways to green your life. We will discuss ways the Georgia Sea Turtle Center is moving toward being a green facility and discover how you can help the environment by changing simple, everyday tasks to major decisions like home renovation and travel. Local resources are available-the research has already been done! Spend an hour with Kelly Price, Education Specialist at the Georgia Sea Turtle Center, and put a little green in your daily diet!

Monday November 30, 2009  7:00 p.m.

At the

Brunswick-Glynn County Library

208 Gloucester Street  Brunswick, GA 31520

912-267-1212

Nov 23

Holiday Discount

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We would like to share some exciting news regarding the Georgia Sea Turtle Center Gift Shop!  Mark your calendar for November 26th, 2009… We are having a 10% discount* on all merchandise in the Gift Shop.  This discount will end on January 15, 2010.

Come by and make your selection and we will take care of the rest!  We offer a wide variety of gifts including, jewelry, hats & visors, travel mugs, assorted sweatshirts, and t-shirts.

We also have educational books for children and adults that will make a great gift.

And don’t forget those decorative pieces of art and pottery!

So come spend the day with us and, for a low admission price, visit our interactive Exhibit Gallery, listen to educational programs and see our patients in our Rehabilitation Pavilion, then stop by the Gift Shop and shop til you drop!  To make things even better, all proceeds help to offset operational costs of the GSTC including patient care, educational programming and research.

Thank you for supporting The Georgia Sea Turtle Center!
Peggy Van Buren
Gift Shop Coordinator
*This offer does not include online sales, admissions, adoptions, memberships or brick purchases.

Nov 20

Update on Griffin…

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Many of you are probably familiar with Griffin, an adult male loggerhead sea turtle who has been a patient here for the past 2 years (arrived on Nov. 16, 2007!). He has been a patient here longer than any other sea turtle and won the Patient of the Year award in 2008.

Griffin was originally stranded off Daytona Beach,FL and was taken to the Volusia County Marine Science Center. He was unable to dive and could not eat on his own. After several weeks, the staff at the Marine Science Center decided that they would like to transfer him here to see if ‘new eyes’ could help find the mystery problem. We received him, and after some initial x-rays, found that he had a lot of gas in his GI tract.  We also treated him for a bacterial infection. He finally began, and continues to, eat on his own but also continues to float and has difficulty diving.

Griffin was taken for multiple MRIs over the past 2 years in an effort to help determine the cause of his floating. The GSTC staff was unable to determine a specific cause from those results, however it appears that he suffered a vascular event, similar to a human stroke. For those of you who know about strokes in humans, often the person has to ‘re-learn’ everything from walking, to talking, to eating.  Well, this is the same situation Griffin appears to be in.

Griffin has been receiving physical therapy twice daily on his front flippers to assist in maintaining the muscle tone. The staff is also pushing him underwater when feeding to help encourage diving behavior.  However, none of these efforts seem to be improving Griffin’s condition.  If he can’t dive, hunt for food and eat on his own, he cannot be released into the wild.

The GSTC staff has made a few attempts to create a weight belt, much like SCUBA divers use, to assist in ‘re-training’ Griffin on how to dive.  There are many variables one needs to take into account when constructing a weight belt for a sea turtle, something that has never been done before so far as we know! It has to be well fitted, not constricting of flipper movement, or abrasive in any way to the turtle, etc.  Our attempts proved unsuccessful.  However, Dr. Norton was at a workshop and began a conversation with some engineers from Georgia Tech, Savannah Campus, who seemed very interested in Griffin’s situation and the challenge presented to them.

After a few months of work, the engineers finally had a creation to try out on Griffin…his first fitting!  So on Friday, November 13, 2009 they came to the GSTC and fitted Griffin with the weight belt they had designed.  Once secured on Griffin, he was placed back in his tank, with a few staff standing close by in the tank as well, to assist if/as need.  Unfortunately, all did not go as planned and Griffin had difficulty staying upright.  It appears the weight kept shifting and the neoprene straps we not secure enough once wet.

Don’t worry yet, this was only the first attempt!  The engineers removed Griffin’s custom weight belt and have a few ideas on how to modify it that may solve the problems we encountered on this first fitting.  So, stay tuned and we’ll update you as information becomes available!

Sincerely,
Stefanie Ouellette
Marine Field Programs Coordinator

Nov 14

Salt Marsh Cleanup

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On Wednesday, November 4th, fourteen volunteers (eight Georgia Sea Turtle Center staff, four Jekyll Island Authority staff, and two residents of Jekyll Island) helped clean the salt marsh along the Jekyll Island Causeway. The cleanup effort was in collaboration with the Keep Brunswick-Golden Isles Beautiful and Rivers Alive organizations. While working, we encountered (and braved) giant crickets, banana spiders, huge cacti, and thousands of sand spurs. However, our efforts were not in vain as twenty-two bags of trash, a plastic children’s swimming pool, a plastic storage container, and three large carpet squares were removed from the salt marsh. And all within just one hour! We were willing to participate in such an important task as it is vital that our environment be healthy and safe; not only for the animals that call the salt marsh home but for us and future generations as well!

~Melissa Q. Daniel, Education Member

Nov 09

2009 Nesting and Hatching Update

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For those of you who are interested, here are some of the numbers from the 2009 Sea turtle Nesting Season. …
  • Loggerhead : total nests = 71; total false crawls (Non-nesting emergences) = 140
  • Leatherback total nests = 2; total false crawls = 0
  • Total Emergences (Nests + False Crawls) = 213
  • Completely depredated by a raccoon = 2 nests
As always,
Thank you for sharing your time with me!
~Amanda Noble~
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