Advertisement
Advertisement

It pooped plastic: rescued sea turtles return to ocean in Argentina after detox

By:
Reuters
Updated: Jan 6, 2023, 18:37 GMT+00:00

By Horacio Soria BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Marine biologists in Argentina have returned two green turtles to the ocean who were rescued after they became entangled in fishing nets, with one of the pair of endangered creatures excreting plastic ingested from the sea.

Rescued sea turtles return to ocean in Argentina

By Horacio Soria

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) – Marine biologists in Argentina have returned two green turtles to the ocean who were rescued after they became entangled in fishing nets, with one of the pair of endangered creatures excreting plastic ingested from the sea.

The turtles spent a month in animal rehab at the Fundación Mundo Marino where scientists checked their swimming, helped with their diet and gave them a chance to detox from plastics. They were returned to the sea on the beaches of San Clemente.

“The turtles arrived, they were put in pools and their swimming was measured to check it was normal,” said Vanesa Traverso, a biologist at the foundation.

“They are herbivorous so we fed them algae and one of them began to defecate plastic, luckily it wasn’t too much. Some 96% of the turtles that enter the center defecate plastic.”

The green sea turtles, classified as endangered, underwent blood tests and even X-rays to check their digestive tracts and lungs. Some previous ones had come to the center and excreted up to 22 grams of garbage that had been ingested.

“One of them had a high level of white blood cells and some parameters that indicated a slight degree of anemia,” said Bianca Mancini, a veterinarian at the foundation. “We treated it with a mix of antibiotics, a vitamin complex and iron.”

(Reporting by Horacio Soria; Writing by Adam Jourdan; editing by Diane Craft)

About the Author

Reuterscontributor

Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest international multimedia news provider reaching more than one billion people every day. Reuters provides trusted business, financial, national, and international news to professionals via Thomson Reuters desktops, the world's media organizations, and directly to consumers at Reuters.com and via Reuters TV. Learn more about Thomson Reuters products:

Advertisement