TRACK THIS TURTLE: RESCUED ‘HAVEN’ GOES HOME WITH A SATELLITE TAG

a group of people looking at a turtle in a pool
A young girl watches as Haven prepares to return home. MARK HEDDEN/Florida Keys News Bureau

Why be in a hurry to go somewhere else when you already live in paradise? A 35-pound green sea turtle named Haven took her time at her release on Aug. 1 at a crowded Sombrero Beach in Marathon while marking her entry as the only rehabilitated juvenile in this year’s Sea Turtle Conservancy’s Tour de Turtles event.

The 8-year-old endangered green sea turtle spent the last six months rehabilitating at the Turtle Hospital after being rescued, wrapped in fishing line and covered in fibropapilloma tumors. Following months of rehab, laser treatment and cancer-fighting eye drops, Haven was declared healthy and ready to return to the sea.

Participants in this “race” are typically nesting female adults that migrate several thousand miles over the course of three months from August to October – proving endurance matters more than speed. The satellite tracking continues for about a year, which is when the transmitters typically fall off. Sea Turtle Conservancy communications coordinator Lexie Beach says that juveniles are “laid back” in comparison.

“We don’t expect them to migrate far distances, so they hang around the Keys and they’re feeding on seagrass, on jellyfish,” she said. “We anticipate Haven will stick close to home and probably just travel maybe a couple hundred miles.”

The turtles are equipped with a small satellite transmitter attached by a special epoxy to the tops of their shells.

“Every time she surfaces, that satellite transmitter will send a ping, and it will update either on the Tour de Turtles website or our STC Sea Turtle Tracker app,” said Beach.

Haven was rehabilitated at the Turtle Hospital, which has released more than 3,000 sea turtles since its founding as Florida’s first licensed turtle rehab facility in 1986 by Richie Moretti.

“We’re especially interested to see how her migration pattern and her behaviors might differ from the wild adult nesting turtles that we’re tracking,” said Beach.The satellite-monitored journey gives researchers valuable data about the migratory patterns of sea turtles while raising awareness about the threats they face. The public can follow each of the turtle entries and root for their favorite at tourdeturtles.org.