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Splinter The Sea Turtle Returns To The Ocean

Rob O'Neal
/
Florida Keys News Service
Bette Zirkelbach from the Turtle Hospital, right, watches Splinter the green sea turtle return to the ocean in Key West.

Splinter the green sea turtle returned home to the Atlantic Ocean off Key West on Friday.

It was less than two months after she was found off Key Largo, tangled up in trap line and speared through the neck.

The spear didn't hit any internal organs. It was removed at the Turtle Hospital in Marathon, where Splinter has been recovering ever since.

"This is a survivor," said Bette Zirkelbach, manager of the Turtle Hospital.

Every turtle returned to the sea is a celebration for the hospital, but Zirkelbach said Splinter offered a more compelling case for education than most.

Sea turtles are often struck by boats, tangled in debris or suffering from fibropapilloma tumors. It's rare for them to be hurt intentionally.

"There are other cultures that still eat sea turtles and I understand that but we need to make people aware in the United States, all species of sea turtles in and around the United States are protected by federal and state law," she said.

Another sea turtle that had been speared was found dead last June in Biscayne National Park.

Credit DOUG MADER, DVM
A mark on the underside, or plastron, shows someone tried to spear Splinter the turtle before this one went in.

Nancy Klingener was WLRN's Florida Keys reporter until July 2022.
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