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Nov 30

Vet Extern Experience – Sarah Masoero

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“Crunch” was the sound I heard as the first wheel left the board walk and dug its way deep into the sand. I should have known this was as far as my trusted wheelchair would take me. Sand is high on my list of most challenging terrains to traverse—it’s up there with steps and gravel. About 50ft in front of me, I saw a crowd of over 200 people lining up near the surf anxiously awaiting the arrival of the Georgia Sea Turtle Center staff with several sea turtles that were scheduled to be released that day. Since I started working at the center only a few days ago, this was my first turtle release so I was equally excited and did not know what to expect. One thing was sure, if I was going to be a part of this experience I would have to get much closer!

Before I had time to concoct a plan, Mike – one of the many amazing AmeriCorps members working at the center – spotted me in the distance, came over, scooped me up, and carried me past everyone down to the release area. Once there, he sat me down in the sand in the middle of the roped-off square!

Okay, at first I was a bit shy sitting ‘front and center’ as people stared at me. The crowd looked at me expectantly, probably wondering if I was going to make an announcement!  Within seconds my shyness faded, however, as I was overcome with excitement seeing the GSTC staff (the Teal-Team) approaching with the first turtle to be released.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It was magical to see the awe and happiness in the faces of children and adults alike as Dr. Terry Norton and his team carried Phantom near the water’s edge. For several minutes, that loggerhead sat motionless staring out onto the ocean. Holding my breath in suspense, I looked around as everyone’s eyes were fixed on Dr. Norton, who was now standing next to his turtle splashing him encouragingly with water. Perhaps Phantom was reflecting back on the last two years he had spent at the GSTC, or perhaps he was taking the time to say goodbye and thank you for his excellent care. The team gave him a little nudge into the water and in just seconds he disappeared into the waves leaving behind a cheering crowd.

It was not until later that summer that I fully understood just how much care, time, love, and dedication goes into rehabilitating these gentle creatures, who ultimately disappear into the distance in the blink of an eye!

That day, watching five turtles return to the ocean, the excitement and support of the public, and witnessing the compassion of the dedicated staff, I suddenly felt like I was becoming part of a greater cause.  In just a few moments I was compelled to become an advocate for these magnificent animals. Also, being swooped up and carried across the sand that morning, I realized that sand would not be a barrier to my Jekyll adventures this summer!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My initial interest in working at the GSTC actually came from my interest in birds! I was a second year veterinary student at the University of Georgia and heard from a fellow vet student that Dr. Norton heads the GA SEANET program, which is dedicated to studying GA’s marine bird populations. The opportunity to learn about GA’s coastal birds and, at the same time, being immersed in the rehabilitation and conservation of sea turtles sounded like a dream come true!

Did I have initial hesitations about traversing Jekyll’s sandy beaches and working with 200lb patients? Sure! But as it turns out the biggest obstacle is not sand or steps, but having an “I can’t” attitude.

As the staff at the GSTC continuously showed me this past summer, for sand and steps there are simple solutions!

A ramp was added, a doorframe was widened, and bingo: 510 Maurice Road was ready for me to call it home for the summer. Most AmeriCorps members and veterinary externs live on the south end of Jekyll Island in student houses, and I was happy to join the family.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I will never forget briefly mentioning – early in the summer – that I really wanted to see a nesting sea turtle. Later that same night I heard “Sarah! Hurry! Turtle! Turtle!” as Greg, one of the AmeriCorps members, bursts into the student house.  He came to pick me up and we immediately headed for the beach. Before I knew it Corey was carting me across the sand in the dark at record speeds, with the moon as our trusted flashlight. I witnessed in awe as a huge loggerhead carefully covered her nest and slowly crawled back to the ocean. Stunned by her determination and calmness, I watched her carry out the behaviors that her species had been programmed with for centuries. Catching a rare glimpse of this unique ritual, I realized the responsibility we shared of becoming ambassadors and protecting these beautiful creatures.

I also remember the time I mentioned to my roommate Bre that I wanted to see a sunrise. The next weekend we crawled out of bed before dawn, and once again (to the dismay of my very sandy chair) I was whirled across the sand.  We witnessed not only a breathtaking sunrise but in passing one of the loggerhead nests, a hatchling was just making its way to the ocean trying to escape a swarm of fire ants! It was amazing to witness the herculean effort and determination of this tiny instinct-driven sea turtle.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At the GSTC, I loved being immediately integrated into the Teal-Team; I thoroughly enjoyed helping with the medical treatments and husbandry of patients. When it came to the 200lb patients, turns out, I wasn’t expected to lift them by myself! Allegedly, no one except for wildlife hero, Dr.Terry Norton, has ever performed such a feat anyways.  In fact, the whole center operates through teamwork. Everybody helps each other, contributing their strengths with the common goal of doing what is best for the turtles. The teamwork I was able to be a part of was eye opening and inspiring, and I hope to mirror this in my own practice one day.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I quickly discovered that no single day was the same at the center. One minute we were in the middle of ‘routine’ medical treatments and one phone call later a stranded sea turtle was on its way to the center requiring emergency surgery.  Despite high patient caseloads, and long working days, I was continuously astonished at the tireless efforts of the staff and their heart-felt dedication to the animals. These attitudes were truly infectious and I soon found myself completely submerged in all things related to turtle-care.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

One patient that stood out to me was a loggerhead named Lucy. She, like many sea turtles, was victim to a boat strike and had severe cuts in her carapace where the propeller hit her shell. The wounds were deep and ridden with leeches and debris from washing up on the shore.  It was no easy sight for this new member of the Teal-Team, unaccustomed to seeing the devastating destruction boats can inflict. Every few days, Lucy was brought into the treatment room for over an hour of wound care. Little by little, debris was carefully picked out of her wounds, followed by rinsing the tissues with copious amounts of antiseptic solution. Her shell was scrubbed with gauze and scraped free of barnacles a little more each day. While several sets of hands were busy tending to Lucy’s wounds, others were busy simply trying to keep this gentle giant on the treatment table, while still others were drawing up her medications and administering her fluids. Pretty soon, Lucy treatments became well-choreographed routines of teamwork and patience.  She was a fighter. Her spirit and determination immediately won our hearts. Before returning her to the tank, her wound was packed with honey and the loose part of her carapace, separated from the rest of the shell by a deep cut, was secured with a stretchy bandage that Dr. Norton created from an athletic compression bandage used in human medicine. Sometimes veterinary medicine, especially turtle medicine, requires ingenuity and creativity!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Injuries that cut into the carapace, like Lucy’s, are at risk for damaging the spinal cord as the spine is fused with the top shell. A spinal cord injury was suspected in Lucy’s case not only due to the severity of her injury but also because she could not move her back flippers.

One afternoon, Lucy was loaded into the GSTC van, and took a little trip to a medical center in Brunswick, where a CT scan was performed to investigate the extent of her injury and spinal cord involvement. That day, and throughout the summer, I often witnessed human physicians and medical staff volunteering their efforts to help care for sea turtle patients.  How inspiring, to see experts of many diverse fields collaborating for such a great cause!

Arriving at the center, it was very unexpected to see a brave loggerhead wheeling through the hallways on a gurney toward the CT machine, which was used on human patients earlier that day. Teal-team members clad in lead aprons, kept Lucy comfortable and safe in the donut-shaped imaging device; the other half sought refuge in the control room with Dr. Norton and anxiously awaited his assessment of the scan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The scan was able to recreate a 3D image of her spinal column, allowing Dr. Norton to evaluate the damage from all angles. Unfortunately, as suspected, the propeller had obliterated several vertebrae and, most likely, the delicate spinal cord housed within it. It was with a heavy heart that we learned, Lucy would have to be humanely euthanized. While it was heartbreaking news, to have to say good-bye to such an inspirational patient, Lucy left behind a meaningful legacy. Not only did she educate everyone visiting the GSTC during her stay there, but her story was also later featured in a newspaper article and on a television program reaching an audience well beyond Jekyll Island. Lucy served as an ambassador, raising awareness and educating the public about one of the many dangers threatening the health of sea turtles today.

Her legacy would also live on in another way. A few weeks after we said goodbye to Lucy, dawn patrol reported some very exciting news. A nest that Lucy had laid just weeks before getting injured had successfully hatched! It was heartwarming to imagine that as many as 100 little loggerheads now embarked on their ocean adventure armed with Lucy’s spirit and determination.

Lucy’s story touched my heart that summer and I am grateful for the opportunity of getting to work with her.

When I wasn’t helping out with treatments and husbandry, or observing a surgery, I devoted time to my SEANET project. The GA SEANET (Seabird Environmental Assessment Network) program focuses on the causes of mortality and disease affecting GA’s marine bird populations. Programs such as this are instrumental in painting a picture of environmental and wildlife health and providing a means to monitor it. GSTC staff, interns, and volunteers patrol the beaches and bring any dead birds to the GSTC for further investigation by Dr. Norton and veterinary students.

My role this summer was to perform necropsies on these birds and prepare tissue samples to bring back to UGA for microscopic evaluation (or histopathology) at SCWDS (Southeastern Cooperate Wildlife Disease Studies). I felt like a detective, closely inspecting these birds, trying to find any clues as to what may have happened to them. Sometimes I found obvious injuries such as broken bones, but other times my findings were rather inconclusive and histopathology will hopefully help shed light on these cases.

One of the things I love about birds is their unique anatomy, and specialized adaptations. This project was a great chance for me to appreciate the comparative anatomy of many different bird species such as pelicans, gulls, and raptors—each with slight differences depending on their diet, behavior and environment.

While nothing is more satisfying and heartwarming for me than the successful rehabilitation and medical treatment of animals, this project opened my eyes to the critical information we can gain from performing necropsies on deceased animals. Compiling necropsy findings and the continued surveillance of shorebirds may make us aware of disease trends, the health of our ecosystem, and the extent of human impact on wildlife.

Looking back on my time at the Georgia Sea Turtle Center, I picked up many golden nuggets along the way. Among these, I will never forget how a sea turtle’s heartbeat sounds just like the ocean. I also leave Jekyll having learned that honey is not just for bears – or peanut butter sandwiches – but it is, in fact, nature’s miracle for wound care!

The adventurous spirit of the GSTC Teal-Team, solidified a simple rule of thumb for me: forget “I can’t”. Instead: boldly go for opportunities when they present themselves! With passion and determination, the currency of magic, no obstacle (not even sand!) can get between you and the things that make you come alive.

 

 

 

 

Nov 25

Thanksgiving at the Georgia Sea Turtle Center

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The Georgia Sea Turtle Center staff and Caton celebrated Thanksgiving Day. The Center, open 10AM-2PM to the public, was in a festive mood.

Nov 17

Squall, the Underdog Who Overcame.

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If I’ve learned anything from Hollywood and movies it’s this; always cheer for the underdog. In the end it’s always the last place team that comes from behind to win the championship game. The nice guy ends up with his dream girl. And the shy quiet science club member transforms into a princess for one night to win prom queen. Typically everyone loves those stories of the underdog defying the odds because at some point we have all felt like the underdog. The funny thing is, why don’t people cheer for the underdog in real life too?

Since starting at the Georgia Sea Turtle Center two months ago, I’ve come into contact with Squall, an adult Loggerhead female, who lost most of her front right flipper during a shark attack earlier in the summer. She defied the odds to survive her initial attack, a testament to the pure strength and determination of these animals. But while sharing her story of survival to the public many people automatically reply with “Well she OBVIOUSLY can’t be returned to the wild, so what’s going to happen to her?” Every time I heard this response it made me wonder why we didn’t cheer for the underdog with our patients. Many people are very surprised to hear that we can and have released turtles with amputations in the past. As long as they can dive for food, surface to breathe, hunt live prey, and swim normally with their remaining limbs, there is no reason why we can’t release them back to their home in the ocean.

Squall met those conditions and was returned to the ocean in a joint release effort with another amputee Loggerhead from Virginia. The other amputee turtle was an adult male Loggerhead by the name of Big Boy 25 who had gotten entangled in debris from an old crabbing pot off the coast of Virginia. He was rehabilitated and treated by the Virginia Aquarium Stranding Response Team, an agency that I also have a personal connection too. They were the organization that first trained me to work with stranded sea turtles and marine mammals when I first interned with the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Squall was released on October 17th from Amelia Island, Florida, while Big Boy 25 was released October 18th from Croatan Beach in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Both of these turtles carry satellite transponders and are able to be tracked on www.seaturtle.org. There, maps of both turtles show them moving at a steady rate farther south to warmer waters and a new beginning.

This is a true testament to the pure strength and will to survive these animals have. They overcome great odds just to make it to adulthood, with only 1 in 4000 hatchlings making it to that life stage. If Squall and Big Boy 25 have made it this far, there is no predicting just how far they are able to go. Underdog stories are not strictly for the cinemas, they’re also for our survivors.

Squall returning back to the sea. (Photo by Americorps member David Keeler.)

 

 

Nov 16

thank you volunteers for 25,000 hours!

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AmeriCorps members Leandra, Caitlin and Becky with Bob and Lou, two of our wonderful volunteers. We also celebrated with a cake from Hollaway’s Bakery in Brunswick.

Today at the Georgia Sea Turtle Center, we are celebrating a tremendous accomplishment completed by our volunteers.  Since our opening in 2007, volunteers have logged more than 25,000 hours and we are thrilled and humbled by their accomplishment!  Here at the GSTC, we rely on the help of our volunteers in the Gift Shop, Husbandry, Education and Research departments.  Volunteers in husbandry help out with the cleaning of tanks, feedings and water changes.  Volunteers in education help with school groups, assist with special events like Turtleween and sea turtle releases while also helping to educate the public on a daily basis.  Volunteers help the research department out with dawn and night patrol during sea turtle nesting season and diamondback terrapin monitoring on our causeways during the summer.  Clearly we have a lot to be thankful for!

In honor of all of our volunteers, we have named our newest patient Gracias as a big Thank You for all that they have done. Gracias is a juvenile Kemp’s Ridley that was rescued by the Coast Guard and DNR between St. Simons Island and Jekyll Island on November 3, 2011.  Gracias is a boat strike victim that has a wound to the plastron and the carapace. A large piece of the marginal scute on the carapace was removed due to the bone being dead. Gracias suffers from air in the coelomic cavity that is being caused by a lung tear. As part of her treatment we are removing air from the coelomic cavity which will help the tear in the lung to heal with time.

We would like to say thanks again to all of our volunteers for a great 25,000 hours and here’s to 25,000 more!

 

Caitlin Sampson

Volunteer Program AmeriCorps Member

Nov 16

Greetings from the GSTC AmeriCorps Education Team!

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Hello from the GSTC’s new AmeriCorps Education Members! We’ve all come from different regions and backgrounds, but we’re all excited to share our love of sea turtles with visitors and the public at large! Even though we’ve already been working at the Center for a few months, we thought we’d take the time to introduce ourselves to followers of the GSTC blog.

Becky Funk is from Big Pool, Maryland. She graduated from West Virginia University in Morgantown, with a degree in Wildlife and Fisheries Resources. During college, Becky was a rugby beast, and has since been applying her ferociousness to her work for the National Park Service at Assateague Island in Virginia. In her spare time, Becky likes to have outdoor adventures and get crafty. Her favorite foods are watermelon and anything covered in Old Bay.

Leandra Darden is from Springfield,Virginia. She attended school at the University of Tampa, earning a degree in Marine Science and Biology. After college, she participated in an AmeriCorps program working to protect salmon in northern California. Leandra’s hobbies include reading, supporting the arts, and slaying jellyfish, just like her GSTC puppet counterpart, Leandro. Her favorite foods are homemade pizza and mashed potatoes.

Nicole Niese is from Fort Wayne, Indiana. She attended Wittenberg University in Springfield, Ohio, graduating with a degree in Biology. While in college, Nicole studied leatherback sea turtles in Trinidad. When not educating the world about sea turtles, Nicole likes to dabble in the harmonica, bake the world’s greatest chocolate chip cookies, and go on bike rides. Her favorite foods include all forms of cake.

Sadie Mills is from Tempe, Arizona. She attended the University of Arizona in Tucson, earning degrees in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Anthropology. While in college, she helped support diversity initiatives and conducted biodiversity research in the artificial ocean at Biosphere 2. After graduation she interned as a naturalist, teaching students and families about the Chesapeake Bay. In her spare time, Sadie likes to explore the outdoors, play basketball, and explore all forms of crafts. Her favorite foods include fish tacos and anything covered in salsa.

Over the past two months, we’ve been working hard to come together as a strong team. We helped each other learn our different turtle patients and programs, and even practiced the famous GSTC puppet show until our fingers ached! It has been a lot of fun to talk to visitors, teach school groups, and help out with our very first turtle release. We’ve continued learning throughout, and are looking forward to finding new and exciting ways to share our turtle knowledge with the public.  One idea we’ve already implemented unites the previously unrelated worlds of sea turtle education and fashion: sea turtle-themed shoes!

You may see us in and around the Center wearing homemade sneakers, each designed to reflect a different aspect of sea turtle biology, ecology, or behavior. Alicia’s epibiota shoes depict the growth of barnacles, anemones, and other living things on top of the loggerhead’s carapace. Becky’s arribada shoes demonstrate the bizarre group nesting behavior of the Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle. Nicole’s pair shows the leatherback sea turtle chasing down its favorite meal- the jellyfish! Sadie’s shoes simulate a sea grass bed, the green sea turtle’s favorite snacking and camouflage habitat, and Leandra’s shoes are covered in hatchlings making their way to the sea. We’ve only been sporting our fancy new footwear for a few weeks, but we’ve already started inspiring questions and comments from visitors. Hopefully our shoes will be just the first of many new endeavors to expand the boundaries of turtle education; we are always on the hunt for our next big idea!

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