21 Endangered Turtles Released into Arabian Gulf

Coinciding with the World Sea Turtle Day 2023, the release underscores the vital role turtles play in maintaining the balance of marine habitats. WAM
Coinciding with the World Sea Turtle Day 2023, the release underscores the vital role turtles play in maintaining the balance of marine habitats. WAM
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21 Endangered Turtles Released into Arabian Gulf

Coinciding with the World Sea Turtle Day 2023, the release underscores the vital role turtles play in maintaining the balance of marine habitats. WAM
Coinciding with the World Sea Turtle Day 2023, the release underscores the vital role turtles play in maintaining the balance of marine habitats. WAM

Jumeirah Group’s Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Project has released 15 Hawksbill and 6 Green Turtles, both of which are considered endangered species, from its Jumeirah Al Naseem beach, Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported Friday.

Coinciding with the World Sea Turtle Day 2023, the release in the Arabian Gulf underscores the vital role turtles play in maintaining the balance of marine habitats, WAM said.

Among the successfully rehabilitated turtles were one large female green turtle which had suffered carapace damage due to a boat strike, as well as a male hawksbill turtle named Zippy.

Zippy was rescued by the Dubai Turtle Rehabilitation Project in October 2022, after being found in bad shape floating near the Ras al Khaimah shoreline and reported via the 800 TURTLE helpline.

Zippy suffered intestine impaction from eating plastic debris, a severe lung infection and was completely covered in barnacles.

The event was hosted by Katerina Giannouka, Chief Executive Officer at Jumeirah Group. In her welcome speech, she said, “With many of our resorts being coastal, both here in the Middle East as well as in Europe, Indonesia and the Maldives, we witness first-hand the impact of climate change on precious marine species and these delicate ecosystems.”

“Coastal resilience and biodiversity health are critical to Jumeirah as a business and for the tourism and hospitality sector globally. We have an obligation to act now, to educate, to collaborate, and to champion progress towards a sustainable future for all," Giannouka added.

The event was attended by key partners including government representatives, academia and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Also in attendance were representatives from Yas Sea World Research and Rescue, who performed a CT scan on Zippy at the start of his remarkable rehabilitation journey.



Australia Tells US Influencer: 'Leave Baby Wombat Alone'

Australia's Wombat Protection Society said the influencer "mishandled a wombat joey." AFP
Australia's Wombat Protection Society said the influencer "mishandled a wombat joey." AFP
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Australia Tells US Influencer: 'Leave Baby Wombat Alone'

Australia's Wombat Protection Society said the influencer "mishandled a wombat joey." AFP
Australia's Wombat Protection Society said the influencer "mishandled a wombat joey." AFP

Australia's top diplomat urged a visiting American influencer on Thursday to "leave the baby wombat alone", after a video appeared to show the woman pestering a young marsupial.

In a now-deleted video posted to Instagram this week, the woman can be seen picking up the hissing wild animal before declaring to the camera: "I caught a baby wombat".

The woman -- identified in Australian media as American outdoors influencer Sam Jones -- then places the wombat back on the side of the road, AFP reported.

The video riled wildlife experts and animal lovers alike -- and on Thursday, concern over it reached the top echelons of the Australian government.

"It looked pretty dreadful, didn't it?" Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong told Australia's Channel Seven.

"I think everyone who would have seen that would have thought, look, leave the baby wombat alone."

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said he was investigating if the woman had violated her visa.

"I can't wait for Australia to see the back of this individual, I don't expect she will return," he said in a statement.

Australia's Wombat Protection Society said the influencer "mishandled a wombat joey" in an "apparent snatch for social media likes".

"She then placed the vulnerable baby back onto a country road -- potentially putting it at risk of becoming roadkill."

Australia's rotund native wombats are among the world's biggest burrowing species, according to the national museum.

While some species are considered endangered, the common bare-nosed wombat is found along large swathes of southern and eastern Australia.