Advertisement

Sea turtle rehabilitation centre reopens at Charles Darwin University

Heff is the largest turtle at Charles Darwin University's rehabilitation centre.

Heff is the largest turtle at Charles Darwin University's rehabilitation centre. Photo: ABC News

Although Heff – the largest turtle at Darwin’s only turtle rehabilitation facility – has been in recovery for three years, he is still not ready to return to the wild.

But he will be given all the time he needs at the freshly revamped and expanded centre at Charles Darwin University.

Michael Guinea, the president of sea turtle research and conservation group AusTurtle, reopened the facility on Tuesday.

AusTurtle president Michael Guinea reopened the facility on Tuesday. Photo: ABC News

He explained it was a place for turtles to finish their rehabilitation before being released back into the sea, no matter how long that took.

Darwin vet nurse Geraldine Reid said there had been a jump in the number of injured turtles due to plastic consumption, and a new facility like the one in Darwin could not have come at a better time.

It can treat around 20 turtles in individual tanks pumped with high-quality water for as long as required.

Two baby turtles recover at the Charles Darwin University facility. Photo: ABC News

When a turtle is injured it is usually taken to a veterinarian, who can perform any emergency treatment. But because of their slow-healing biology, they need a few months to recover enough to return to the wild.

That is where the rehabilitation centre comes in.

“Time is the biggest factor, so what we are trying to do is provide them with the time, expert care, good water quality, uncrowded facilities so they can be released back to where they came from,” Mr Guinea said.

The upgraded turtle rehabilitation facility caters for 20 turtles. Photo: ABC News

Others have already shown improvements after being in treatment for 24 hours.

“There are a number of natural causes of turtles becoming sick. Some of it is diet. You hear of things such as massive floods in Queensland upsetting seagrass beds, which causes them to lose weight,” Mr Guinea said.

“Then you also have boat collisions. Then the shell can be repaired and there is a very long grow-out period for those turtles.”

The rehabilitation centre is the only service available to injured turtles found from Cairns (Qld) to Exmouth (WA).

ABC

Stay informed, daily
A FREE subscription to The New Daily arrives every morning and evening.
The New Daily is a trusted source of national news and information and is provided free for all Australians. Read our editorial charter
Copyright © 2024 The New Daily.
All rights reserved.