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Endangered Sea Turtle Recovers After 90 Days of Care
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Endangered Sea Turtle Recovers After 90 Days of Care

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Bear the hawksbill sea turtle washed ashore sick and covered in barnacles. After 90 days of care from marine biologists, she recovered fully and returned to the ocean. Her species is critically endangered with only 8,000 nesting females left worldwide. Our community grows stronger when we learn together and share knowledge across neighborhoods.

Marine biologists at Mudgeroo Wombat & Wildlife Refuge in Australia made an amazing rescue happen. They saved Bear, a hawksbill sea turtle who was found sick and covered in barnacles. After 90 days of care, she returned to the ocean healthy and strong.

Bear was one of three sea turtles found stranded in just three days. Summer weather in New South Wales brings warmer ocean conditions that can leave sea turtles exhausted and sick. Two of the rescued turtles did not survive, but Bear fought through her illness with help from the rescue team.

The first weeks were critical for Bear's recovery. She needed constant veterinary care and monitoring. By March, she had gained weight and looked completely different from when she first arrived. The barnacles were gone, and her body was strong again.

Bear's recovery matters for her entire species. Hawksbill sea turtles are critically endangered after their population dropped by 80% over three generations. Only 8,000 nesting females remain in the wild worldwide. These turtles live in subtropical waters across the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans.

The rescue team celebrated Bear's return to the ocean on March 21. Her journey back to begin her reproductive life gives hope for the survival of hawksbill sea turtles. Stories like Bear's show how dedicated care can help endangered species recover and thrive.

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