
Seal pups: Public urged to look but not touch
Since opening its doors in 1989, the sanctuary has helped rehabilitate and return nearly 600 sick, injured, or abandoned seal pups back into the wild.With a new season beginning, staff at the centre are bracing themselves for another busy period with five harbour pups already admitted. Seals are legally protected from killing and intentional or reckless disturbance.The Portaferry-based centre has asked the public to be mindful of the mammals this summer by taking pictures from a distance and contacting them should they have any concerns."Usually if a seal is on land there's a reason for it," said Mr Morrison."So we don't want to be trying to put them back in the water, they're not whales or dolphins, they're absolutely fine out of water. "Keeping an eye on dogs is also really important."
'Harbour seals are our biggest concern'
Two species of seal inhabit the coast and seas around Northern Ireland, according to the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (Daera).The harbour seal is smaller, has a dog-like face and prefers more sheltered areas. The grey seal is larger, has a longer head and is more often seen in exposed areas.In 2024 there were about 1,185 harbour seals on the coastline around Northern Ireland, compared to an estimated 3,165 grey seals.Because of the lower population numbers, the sanctuary has prioritised conservation efforts around harbour seals."The tight window between June and July when harbour seal pups are born is our biggest concern," Mr Morrison said. "They are the smaller of the two species and their numbers have not done as well as the grey seals."
The road to recovery
From rescue to release, the road to re-entering the wild has several stages including being placed in a hospital pen, feeding, learning to swim and socialise with other seals in a nursery pool, and finally learning to swim and feed in deeper waters in a pre-release pool.
Aran Pollock, who is part of the animal care team, said without the round-the-clock care provided by the sanctuary many of the seal pups would starve or freeze to death."When you see them come in, some of them are in awful condition, they're just tiny," he said.The seals are cared for by staff at the centre and tube-fed milk to build their strength before they are released."Once we have taken care of them enough, once we know that they can eat fish by themselves, when we know that they can swim very well in our deep pool, then there are pretty much no worries."However, each released seal has a tag so staff are able to keep an eye on their rescues even when they return to the wild.
What to do if you spot a seal pup
Grey seal pupping typically runs from the end of June into July.Baby seals are born with a white fluffy coat to keep them warm and rarely enter the water in their first few weeks, so it is not uncommon to see them on beaches, rocks, and harbours around the coast.Seals will often leave pups on the shore to hunt for food and may not return if there are a lot of people in the area around the pup.Members of the public should not attempt to return a seal to the water.Exploris advises people to keep dogs on a lead when walking on beaches, warning that grey seals in particular are capable of inflicting nasty bites and could injure dogs.If you believe a seal is injured or in distress you can contact Exploris for help.
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
6 hours ago
- The Guardian
The Guardian view on GCSE results: the Covid generation has surpassed expectations
Pupils in England, Wales and Northern Ireland have overcome the obstacles placed in their way by the Covid pandemic to a striking degree. The cohort who received their GCSE results on Thursday did not take Sats at the end of primary school. Their crucial transition to secondary education was disrupted, with students missing chunks of formal learning and experiences such as school trips. This year's strong results should thus be celebrated as a triumph over adversity. Teachers deserve enormous credit for stewarding these pupils through what is always a demanding set of tests. Like last week's A-levels, however, these results also give rise to concerns. Chief among these are the widening attainment gaps between richer and poorer areas, and between better-off and disadvantaged pupils. Predictably, the poorest children have suffered the worst effects from Covid disruption. On some metrics, including school attendance, decades of progress have unravelled. The number of candidates passing compulsory resits of maths and English has also declined – a situation rightly described by one exam board chief, Jill Duffy, as a crisis. Rectifying the unjust situation whereby there is no pupil premium after year 11 would be a good start. Bridget Phillipson has already announced the expansion of a scheme offering dedicated support and mentoring to schools in England that are 'stuck'. But while pupils in the north-east and north-west continue to score lower grades on average than those in and around London, this is not a simple tale of north and south. Comparing pre- and post-pandemic outcomes, a new report from the Institute for Government (IfG) highlights complexities that require fresh approaches. While councils have lost most of the power they once had over schools, the significant attainment gap between the least and most successful local authority areas points to some highly localised, place-specific effects. Multiple attempts to boost results in towns such as Blackpool have failed. New thinking and resources will be needed to achieve turnarounds. Another issue is understanding what kinds of schools serve disadvantaged pupils best. Schools with a mix of social backgrounds and abilities are the long-established preference of progressives. But the evidence from the IfG is complex: it finds examples both of disadvantaged pupils benefiting from socially mixed settings, and of them doing better in primary schools where they are clustered – perhaps because teachers there are more focused on their needs. Some London boroughs, meanwhile, are a law unto themselves, outperforming other areas by wide margins despite high levels of disadvantage (evidence suggests Birmingham and Manchester may be on similar trajectories). While the gap between boys' and girls' results shrank slightly this year, differences between ethnic groups are significant yet hard to summarise. When disadvantaged schools are compared, those with higher proportions of pupils with English as an additional language do better. Overall, the results give cause for reassurance about young people's resilience. But relief that some of the worst predictions about the pandemic have not come true must not obscure the fact that more than 40% of pupils missed the crucial grade 4 in maths and English. There are other problems with GCSEs, and exams and assessment in general. But too-rigid rules around resits, and the wider question of how to improve post-16 options, are the most pressing.


BBC News
9 hours ago
- BBC News
Is there a 'resit crisis'? Key takeaways from 2025's GCSE results
More than 600,000 teenagers have been opening GCSE and other Level 2 results on have just finished Year 11, marking the end of a secondary school journey that began in Covid "bubbles" back in 2020. But a growing proportion of those opening results are older, having resat the English or maths GCSEs that they didn't pass the first time of those older students will have sat their initial GCSEs at a time when grades were being purposefully lowered to tackle grade inflation during the are the key things you need to know. 1. GCSE pass rate falls again The GCSE pass rate has fallen again – with 67.4% of all grades in England, Wales and Northern Ireland at 4/C and is slightly down from 67.6% last were always expected to be similar to last year, after years of flux because of the Covid were sharp rises in top grades in 2020 and 2021 when exams were cancelled and results were based on teachers' was followed by a phased effort to bring them back down to 2019 levels, and grading returned to pre-pandemic standards across all three nations last the overall pass rate fell this year, there are differences between the is the only nation to have seen a fall (from 67.4% to 67.1%). The pass rate has actually gone up in Wales (from 62.2% to 62.5%) and Northern Ireland (from 82.7% to 83.5%).The percentage of all top grades, marked at 7/A or above, rose very slightly from 21.8% to 21.9%. There have been warnings of fiercer competition for places at sixth form colleges this year. 2. Resit numbers are up Nearly a quarter of maths and English GCSEs were taken by people aged 17 and older this made up 23.4% of maths and English grades – compared to 20.9% last will be mature students sitting exams for the first time, but most will be young people resitting papers. Many of them will have taken their GCSEs the first time around when grades were being brought down after the pandemic, leading to fewer England, pupils who don't get at least a grade 4 in GCSE English and maths have to continue studying for it alongside their next course - their A-levels or their T-level, for Department for Education (DfE) says pupils should retake the exam when they think they are ready - although it has been described as a requirement in the pass rate for those who resit is far lower than it is for Year England, just 20.9% of English entries and 17.1% of maths entries from people aged 17 and over were marked at grade 4 or Duffy, the head of the OCR exam board, said there was a "resit crisis"."Tinkering at the edges of policy won't fix this," she said. "We need fundamental reform to maths and English secondary education... to support those who fall behind."The Association of School and College Leaders called the policy "demoralising", while the Association of Colleges said resits "can undermine confidence and motivation".They are all waiting for the DfE to publish its curriculum and assessment review this year, which is examining the policy. 3. Regional gap shrinks, but it's still higher than before Covid Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson warned on Wednesday that these GCSE results would "expose the inequalities that are entrenched in our education system".We only have limited data at the moment - a breakdown of exam results by things like ethnicity and free school meal status come later in the year - but we can look at regional last year, London had the highest pass rate (71.6%) and the West Midlands had the lowest (62.9%).It's the first time the gap between the highest- and lowest-performing regions has shrunk since 2021. It's 8.7 percentage points this year, down from 9.4 last the gap is still wider than it was at any point in the decade leading up to the pandemic, when it ranged between 6.4 and 7.2 percentage narrowing of the gap this year is not because the pass rate in the West Midlands has risen (it has actually dropped slightly), but rather because it fell more steeply in London than in any other region. 4. Gap between boys and girls is the lowest on record The gap between boys' and girls' pass rates across all three nations has narrowed to its lowest on continue to outperform boys, but their grades have dropped while boys' have risen means there's a difference of 6.1 percentage points this year, down from 6.7 last been looking over data that goes back all the way to 2000, and that gap is the lowest it's been at any point this was at its widest in 2017 (9.5 percentage points) and has been falling ever from the Education Policy Institute suggests that girls' performance has been "declining in absolute terms" since the Covid has linked this to "worrying trends around girls' wellbeing" such as worsening mental health and social media use. 5. Au revoir French... hola Spanish French has been a staple of British secondary education for years, but it's been overtaken by Spanish in popularity for the first time were 136,871 entries for Spanish GCSE this year, compared to 132,808 for Duffy, from the OCR, said it could be because Spanish was a "massive global language" and Spain was a popular holiday French teacher at a school in Scarborough agreed, telling the BBC that pupils associated Spanish with their favourite footballers, as well as "sunshine and holidays"."They say they are more likely to use it when they go away," she Association of School and College Leaders said it was "great to see" Spanish becoming so popular, but the decline in entries to French and German was a "source of concern". Additional reporting by Phil Leake, Libby Rogers, Muskeen Liddar and Daniel Wainwright


BBC News
10 hours ago
- BBC News
GCSE results: Students celebrate across South West
Thousands of students are opening their GCSE, BTec and Cambridge National results across the South GCSE pass rate has fallen this year with 67.4% of all grades in England, Wales and Northern Ireland at 4 or C and above.A number of students at Teign School in Devon have shared their delight with many results exceeding in Cornwall, students have been waking up to their results, with leaders assuring students that they will be supported no matter what. 'Started crying' Olivia, from Teign School, said she was "really happy" with her results."My grades are higher than I thought," she said. "Science I got a 7 and History I got a 9 - I was very excited about that. "My parents are so proud - they immediately started crying."Head of school at Teign Lucie Wagner said: "We are so proud of our Year 11 students and what they have accomplished. "These results reflect not only their academic ability but also their resilience, commitment and willingness to succeed. "They are a credit to our school and community." Jamie Knights, from the Cornwall College Group, which is made up of 10 campuses across Cornwall and Devon, said: "Some of the students will be thrilled with their results, some OK and some disappointed."The most important thing we can tell students, parents and carers is that there are so many opportunities no matter what the results are. "The best thing they can do is just to get in contact with people to talk about those options." Jasper, a student at Penair School in Truro, said: "I didn't fail anything - it's way better than I thought."I passed everything - its not bad, it's really good!""I get on to the business diploma course that I want to do - I'm really pleased."