Sea Turtle Rescue and Rehabilitation

Turtles at our Sea Turtle Hospital practice foraging for food
Turtles at our Sea Turtle Hospital practice foraging for food Photo: Vanessa Kahn
The New England Aquarium is home to three well-known sea turtles—Myrtle, Carolina, and Retread—but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. At the Sea Turtle Hospital in our Quincy Animal Care Center, we rehabilitate hundreds of injured turtles each year.

Sea Turtle Rescue

For more than 35 years, the New England Aquarium has partnered with Mass Audubon’s Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary to rescue, rehabilitate, and release endangered and threatened cold-stunned sea turtles on Cape Cod.

Sea turtles arrive at the Aquarium's turtle hospital in need of immediate care.
Sea turtles arrive at the Aquarium's turtle hospital in need of immediate care. Photo: Vanessa Kahn
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What is Cold-stunning?

As cold-blooded reptiles, sea turtles depend on the temperature of their surroundings to maintain their body temperature. When water temperatures decline, sea turtles can suffer from a form of hypothermia called cold-stunning. Each fall in Cape Cod Bay, some turtles get stuck in the cooling waters, become cold-stunned, and wash up on beaches.

Sea Turtle Rehabilitation

Our rescue team works diligently to care for the turtles in our Sea Turtle Hospital. Treatment can last from several months to years until a turtle is healthy enough to be able to be released into the ocean.

Sea turtle hospital staff are helping turtles in large water tanks
The Aquarium's Sea Turtle Hospital in Quincy, Mass Photo: Vanessa Kahn

Transport and Release

Each year, hundreds of turtles arrive at our Sea Turtle Hospital. When the turtles are stabilized, we work with partners around the country to transport them to authorized rehab facilities to continue their care until released. The most critically ill patients remain in our Sea Turtle Hospital until healed, and close to 85% of these turtles are released back into the ocean.

Rescue staff load a Turtles Fly Too plane with sea turtles ready for relocation.
Rescue staff load a Turtles Fly Too plane with sea turtles ready for relocation. Photo: Vanessa Kahn
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Sea Turtle Release

Watch as seven rehabilitated sea turtles were released back into the ocean off of Cape Cod. This group of turtles included two green sea turtles, and five loggerheads. The two green sea turtles were satellite tagged, which allows us to collect data on where the turtles swim, feed, and travel.

A sea turtle named Aphrodite receives a check-up
A sea turtle named Aphrodite receives a check-up Photo: Vanessa Kahn

By the Numbers

536 total turtles admitted to the turtle hospital in 2024
435

Kemp’s ridley turtles

39

green sea turtles

62

loggerhead turtles

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Make a Difference for Sea Turtles

Your support makes a difference for threatened and endangered marine life everywhere by helping provide the Aquarium with the resources to conduct research, advocate, and rehabilitate.

Take Action for Sea Turtle Conservation

Your support of the Sea Turtle Rescue Assistance Act is needed to help advance critical rescue and rehabilitation efforts for sea turtles.

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