
Christmas miracle: green sea turtle rescued in Ireland set free in Canary Islands
TALIARTE, Spain, May 23 (Reuters) - Solstice, a rare green sea turtle found paralysed by cold on Christmas Eve on an Irish beach, was set free in Spain's Canary Islands on Friday, six months after she was rescued and underwent a programme of care by vets.
The young turtle, which would normally swim in tropical or subtropical waters, was probably taken by northbound currents and washed up almost dead on a beach in County Clare in Ireland's southwest, Pascual Calabuig, a vet and biologist from the fauna conservation centre in Gran Canaria, told Reuters.
"She came in with pneumonia, meningitis and she was cold-stun, so she was in pretty bad shape and she had shark or seal bites on the top and bottom of her shell," Maria Foley, Animal Manager at the Dingle Ocean World in Ireland, said.
Like most reptiles, turtles are unable to regulate their body temperature and become paralysed when water around them gets too cold.
Foley flew with Solstice to Taliarte on Gran Canaria, which is located off West Africa in the Atlantic Ocean, to set her free.
For six months, the one-foot (0.3 metres) wide, seven-pound (3.1 kilograms) turtle was fed with prawns and squids and treated with antibiotics. She is now fully recovered.
Solstice is the second turtle Foley's team have brought from Ireland to Taliarte. Recent studies have shown areas suitable for sea turtles have extended, probably due to warmer sea waters, though since their lifespan is so long, behavioural change must be observed over long periods.
Green sea turtles, though classified as endangered, are fairly common around the Canary archipelago. They take their name from the colour of their fat, not the colour of their shell.
They can live up to 90 years in the wild and grow up to 5 feet and weigh up to 415 pounds.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BreakingNews.ie
11 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Leaving Cert: Teacher analyses 'well-rounded' Maths Paper One
A teacher has given his initial reaction to Leaving Cert Maths paper one, which students completed on Friday. 'Overall, the 2025 Leaving Cert Higher level Maths Paper 1 was quite nice for students, however, many may agree that the tone of Section B felt different to other years,' said Studyclix subject expert Stephen Begley, Head of Maths at Dundalk Grammar School. 'It was more prompted and scaffolded than usual and did not appear as dense as it has in the past. Advertisement "While the short questions were rather delightful in ways, the long questions were a little light feeling in parts and were heavily scaffolded. "Beneficial in ways, the examiner was generous throughout in pointing out what methods and techniques students should use to approach a question, for example by indicating to use a certain formula or technique. 'While it was not without challenge, this made for a rather sound HL Maths Paper which presented a decent set of questions that harnessed an essence of fairness and accessibility, and indeed challenge. "The short questions saw the usual suspects of Algebra, Calculus, Complex Numbers and Functions, while the long questions focused on Arithmetic and Algebra, Calculus and Functions, and a considerable amount of Sequences and Series with a sneaky Induction proof to finish off the paper. Advertisement 'Overall, it was a well-rounded paper covering many main areas at LC HL. Notably, Financial Maths and Area and Volume were absent from the paper, so don't rule these out of the game in Paper 2 on Monday. Additionally, Trigonometric Functions didn't appear so glace over them this weekend 'It is important for students to remember of the advantage the choice provided by Covid amendments gives students by only having to answer 5 of the 6 and 3 of the 4 long questions and so they could have played to their strengths in this paper." LC Maths Paper 1 (Ordinary) Stephen Begley said: 'A fair paper spanning the usual suspects of Financial Maths, Complex Numbers, Algebra, Calculus, Functions, Patterns and Area. "While parts were certainly not without challenge, the short questions in Section A were quite nice and students could play to their strengths answering any 5 of the 6. Those who prepared using past papers would have benefitted from the familiarity of question styles from years gone by. Advertisement The long questions in Section B had students answer any 3 of the 4. The topics covered here were Functions, Differentiation, Financial Maths, Number Patterns, and Area. Topic wise it followed suit with previous exams and students were well prompted and guided in parts. Overall, a good start to the ordinary level maths exams and all eyes will be on the Paper 2 on Monday which I advise students to take a look at their Statistics, Trigonometry, Coordinate Geometry of the Line and Circle and Probability over the weekend as these are always the main players.' LC Foundation Level 'The Foundation Level paper was well rounded for students as it spanned all topics on the course; Arithmetic, Statistics, Probability, Financial Maths, Geometry, Patterns, Coordinate Geometry and Distance, Speed and Time "The questions were well balanced and well prompted to guide students through an exam busy with various topics. Advertisement "Students would have been pleased with a number of tables, graphs and charts to work with throughout, given their heavy feature within the course," he said. Junior Cert Maths (Higher) Stephen Begley said: 'This year's paper saw a balanced yet busy higher-level paper spanning all major topics on the course, though as usual, it wasn't without its challenges. "There was a good mix of topics assessed; arithmetic, pattens, statistics, coordinate geometry, geometry, area and volume, trigonometry, with the later questions were heavy with functions and algebra. "The opening three questions would have been a delight for students and certainly would've eased some nerves on basic percentages and patterns. Advertisement 'Some nice algebra questions on long division, simultaneous equations and a quadratic equation emerged throughout the tail end of the paper, and a familiar area and algebra cross over in Question 13 closed the exam. 'Notably absent from the paper were questions relating to Pythagoras' "Theorem, Number Systems and Indices. All eyes will be on the marking scheme to see how the updated grade descriptors will be awarded and that those mathematicians deserving of a top grade will be awarded such, given that a distinction grade has now been broadened to 85-100 perc cent, a higher merit from 70-85 per cent and a merit from 55-70 per cent.' Junior Cert Maths (Ordinary) Finally, Stephen Begley said: 'The Junior Cycle Ordinary Level Maths paper was a very accessible, well presented, and well represented exam. Students were put through the paces on their knowledge of the entire course with essentially all topics appearing; Arithmetic, Financial Maths, Statistics, Area and Volume, Sets, Algebra, Graphs (Distance, Speed & Time), Coordinate Geometry, and Trigonometry. "No topic overly dominated and questions were well presented with some pleasing visuals to aid contexts. Overall, students would have found this to be a fair Junior Cycle exam. Notably, Geometry and Functions were absent from the paper.'


The Guardian
14 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘It was our hope spot': scientists heartbroken as pristine coral gardens hit by Western Australia's worst bleaching event
The Rowley Shoals are on many a diver's bucket list. The three coral atolls, hundreds of kilometres off the Western Australian coastline, are teeming with pristine coral gardens that for a long time, unlike many of the world's reefs, had escaped the ravages of global heating. 'I've seen a fair bit of death and destruction, but Rowley Shoals was always the place that was still standing,' says Dr James Gilmour, a research scientist at the Australian Institute of Marine Science. 'Just the sheer abundance of life is incredible. It was our hope spot. It's the reef I love more than any other. So this was super emotional.' Starting in August 2024, an unprecedented heatwave has swept across Western Australia's reefs, turning corals white from the World Heritage-listed Ningaloo all the way to Ashmore Reef, about 1,500km north-east. Now, teams of government scientists are reporting widespread coral death, which they say is the worst bleaching to hit the state. There are still areas of live coral, and some bleached coral will recover, but as scientists gather data, the scale of mortality has left many shocked. At Rowley Shoals, Gilmour, who has been researching corals for 30 years, says a visit in mid-April presented a devastating and confronting scene. 'It was several weeks after the peak heat stress. Some corals were still bleached white, but most had died. We saw that over vast areas,' he says. 'The structure is still there but they're now all covered in algae. Everywhere was dead coral skeletons.' Coral bleaching describes a process whereby the coral animal expels the algae that live in its tissues and give it its colour and much of its nutrients. Without its algae, a coral's white skeleton can be seen through its translucent flesh, giving off a bleached appearance. Mass coral bleaching over large areas, first noticed in the 1980s around the Caribbean, is caused by rising ocean temperatures. Some corals also display fluorescent colours under stress when they release a pigment that filters light. Sunlight also plays a role in triggering bleaching. Corals can survive bleaching if temperatures are not too extreme or prolonged. But extreme marine heatwaves can kill corals outright. Coral bleaching can also have sub-lethal effects, including increased susceptibility to disease and reduced rates of growth and reproduction. Scientists say the gaps between bleaching events are becoming too short to allow reefs to recover. Coral reefs are considered one of the planet's ecosystems most at risk from global heating. Reefs support fisheries that feed hundreds of millions of people, as well as supporting major tourism industries. The world's biggest coral reef system – Australia's Great Barrier Reef – has suffered seven mass bleaching events since 1998, of which five were in the past decade. The sandy-bottomed reef lagoons – usually alive with colourful branching corals and fish filling every space – are now 'huge fields of staghorns, all dead,' Gilmour says. 'The outer slope drops from a few metres to 50 metres and it's like looking down the side of a cliff. You can usually see the life down there – the sharks swimming. But this time we looked down the side of the mountain and you didn't see life.' Gilmour says the temperatures at every reef north of Ningaloo reached as high as or higher than ever recorded. 'We've never had every major WA reef affected in a single event. This is the worst coral bleaching event recorded for WA reefs.' Dr Chris Fulton, a principal research scientist at AIMS, has been going to the World Heritage-listed tourism hotspot of Ningaloo since 2008. After a research visit in late January when corals were turning white, he and colleagues returned last week. 'It was a real shock and a lot of us were deeply affected,' Fulton says. 'You have the desert going right to the water's edge and you can just step off the shore in to a spectacular reef that you don't get anywhere else. These natural features are comforting. So imagine if they've all been painted white. Every shape and size of coral colony are being affected with bleaching and mortality.' Fulton spends hundreds of hours a year diving and, usually, the water temperature isn't something that registers. 'But we were all struck by the massive heat in the lagoon,' he says. Ningaloo has bleached badly before, in 2010/11, but Fulton says this year is worse. Temperature loggers in the water showed it was up to 3C above normal – levels that can be devastating for corals. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email After surveying one personal favourite spot, known as the Oyster Stacks, Fulton says he emerged 'bawling my eyes out'. 'I couldn't believe how bad it was – but then there's a resolve to document what's happening.' Fulton says the seaweed meadows used by fish as nurseries have fared OK, but the fish that feed on coral – such as the Chevron butterfly fish – are crowding around the few surviving corals. 'They're often the pretty fish, but they're usually the first to go. They literally starve to death, and we're starting to see that already. I'm not optimistic they're going to survive.' One bright spot, says Fulton, is that some individual corals across a wide variety of types had managed to survive when others of the same species had died. 'I'm astounded by that,' he said. 'So it's a genuine source of optimism.' Elsewhere along the WA coastline, the story of coral death is repeated. At the Kimberley Marine Research Station, intern and recent university ecology graduate Tara Thomsen, from Melbourne, says even though temperatures have started to fall, there is still bleaching 'I've found it pretty heartbreaking, coming to this beautiful part of the world with pristine areas but seeing in some places the reefs reduced to rubble. It's pretty sad,' she says. Phillip 'Bibido' McCarthy, coordinator of Bardi Jawi Rangers, says there are 50 or 60 small islands off the Dampier Peninsula, many with big reefs. 'We've had a big impact right through the coastline,' McCarthy says. 'We can see the whiteness even off the boat ramp. It's quite terrible. Our resources come from the ocean. These habitats are where the fish grow. I'm 56 but I've never seen anything like this.' Dr Thomas Holmes coordinates the marine science program at the WA government's Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions. Reefs have been monitored from the air and in the water. He says the heatwave started to reach levels to bleach corals in December. At Ningaloo, bleaching is still unfolding. 'I'm not afraid to use the word unprecedented,' he says. 'We have never seen this in recorded history, whether it's the period of time – it started getting hot in December and some places are still bleaching – or in how hot it's got. And it's unprecedented in scale.' Dr Claire Spillman, principal research scientist at the Bureau of Meteorology, confirms marine heatwave conditions started in WA as early as August 2024 and are ongoing in central and southern parts of the state's waters. Australia's ocean areas have warmed on average by 1C since 1900, and several WA ocean areas have seen their hottest months in this latest heatwave. 'Warming events like the one we are seeing now off the WA coast are becoming more frequent,' Spillman says. Helping fuel the heat, too, has been an accumulation of warmer water in the far western Pacific, which pushed down the WA coast to become part of the Leeuwin current running south. About 90% of the extra heat trapped by rising levels of greenhouse gases has been absorbed by the ocean. Gilmour says the sheer scale of ocean heating is something corals in the region have never had to deal with. 'When you're out there it looks like everything is dead, and it's overwhelming. For Rowley Shoals it will take 10 years [for some recovery] – if we don't get another severe bleaching event. But of course, we are going to get one. 'What really worries me and others is not so much the loss of the corals and reefs, it's that we have reached the point where all these ecosystems are in the same situation. 'And what does this mean? 'This is what 1.5C above the preindustrial [average temperature] means. Things will get a lot worse before it gets better, and that's what makes me sad.'


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
James Norton and Rebecca Adlington in Kent swimming challenge
Actor James Norton and Olympic swimming gold medallist Rebecca Adlington are set to take part in a 10-hour swim relay challenge on the Kent coast to raise funds for marine will plunge into the cold waters at Joss Bay, Broadstairs, at 07:00 BST on proceeds raised will go towards the Blue Marine Foundation, a charity dedicated to restoring the ocean to health by addressing Adlington said: "I'm thrilled to take part in the Wild Blue Swim Challenge at such a stunning location as Joss Bay and to be joined by so many swimmers united for a cause that truly matters is amazing." Mr Norton added: "Like everyone, I'm in awe of the ocean. "It's wild, powerful, and under [challenge] is about protecting biodiversity and reconnecting with the natural world before it's too late."According to new research from Blue Marine Foundation, these has been a 92% global reduction in seagrass meadows and a 95% decline in native oyster reefs over the last proceeds from the swim will go towards funding vital projects focused on reviving of both these underwater ecosystems.