By: Madoka McAllister
Class of 2014, University of Illinois
In January 2010, I had the distinct pleasure of taking part in a marine animal rehabilitation internship at the Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Florida. I had had some previous rehabilitation experience but never with marine animals so it was a very new, exciting opportunity for me. Although the Rehabilitation Hospital at Mote takes in sea turtles, dolphins and whales, our patients were exclusively sea turtles during my time there. Having gone into the internship knowing little about sea turtles, I was amazed to discover how intelligent and graceful they are. Many had distinct personalities and over the duration of my internship, I became very fond of them.

Florida experienced a sudden cold snap this past winter, with water temperatures dropping 5-8 degrees below average, resulting in the second coldest winter on record in many areas. Most wildlife and plant life was severely impacted, including thousands of sea turtles that were cold-stunned as a result of the unusual weather. Cold-stunned turtles are extremely weak and were unable to swim properly, often floating at the ocean's surface or washing up on shore. I arrived at the Mote just in time to help out with the inflow of cold-stunned sea turtles.
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