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Turtle-y awesome: 'Cheeky' green turtle Smee returned to ocean

Author
Luke Kirkness,
Publish Date
Tue, 7 Mar 2023, 4:04pm

Turtle-y awesome: 'Cheeky' green turtle Smee returned to ocean

Author
Luke Kirkness,
Publish Date
Tue, 7 Mar 2023, 4:04pm

A 鈥渃heeky鈥 green turtle has been released after 11 months of rehabilitation.

Smee, named after Captain Hook鈥檚 first mate, was accidentally hooked by a fisherman off the 艑mokoroa coast last year.

Smee was initially triaged by a team at Auckland Zoo who found he had swallowed a second fishing hook.

Both hooks were removed and Smee鈥檚 health improved at Sea Life Kelly Tarlton鈥檚 Turtle Rehabilitation Centre before staff released him back into the ocean off Tauranga on Monday. .

The moment was bittersweet for the staff but lead turtle rehabilitator Tyler Hall said the other turtles 鈥減robably breathed a sigh of relief鈥.

鈥淗e was a hungry boy and cheeky. He was always knocking things over and trying to get in the way of other turtles trying to get to their food.

鈥淗e was the big guy in the tank. The other turtles are more reserved and not keen to get in your face.

鈥淲hen we were diving, Smee was coming over and checking what we were up to when the others mind their own business.鈥

Most of the turtles in the centre have been affected by humans in some way, including boat strikes, fishing hooks, plastic ingestion or habitat destruction.

Smee grew from 11.5 kilograms to 19kg while under the care of the team.

Smee was released back into the ocean after 11 months of rehabilitation. Photo / Supplied

Smee was released back into the ocean after 11 months of rehabilitation. Photo / Supplied

The rescue, rehabilitation and release of sick and injured sea turtles was a collaborative effort from Team Turtle, which includes Sea Life Kelly Tarlton鈥檚, the Department of Conservation, Auckland Zoo and iwi.

It would be releasing more sea turtles into the ocean over the next couple of months.

Hall encouraged people to report injured or stranded turtles to the DOC emergency hotline on 0800 362 468.

鈥淓xplain to them what you found and they鈥檒l send someone out there right away.

鈥淒on鈥檛 attempt to put it back because usually if these things have happened it鈥檚 for a specific reason. It鈥檚 better to find out what鈥檚 wrong, look after them and send them on their way when the time is right.鈥

It was hoped Smee would not be seen again but if he did find himself in trouble, Hall said, like other rescued turtles, he had flipper tags put on and was microchipped.

The microchip was the same as those that go into dogs or cats and was a way to identify Smee if something happened to his tags.

GPS tags were not used because they were expensive and invasive, Hall said.

Although turtles breed in the tropics and subtropics, five species were seen in New Zealand waters.

Greens and leatherbacks were the most common, and others were loggerheads, hawksbills and olive ridleys, according to the DoC website.

Green turtles feed mostly on seagrasses, algae and mangroves. They also eat fish and their eggs, jellyfish, sponges and various shellfish.

They are called green turtles because of the colour of their meat when made into soup.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists green turtles as endangered.

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