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  • 16
    Mar
    2012
    11:37am, EDT

    Sea turtle released after swallowing 4-inch fishing hook

    Jason Collier / Sea World

    A loggerhead turtle was released back into the ocean Thursday after swallowing a fishing hook.

    By Lisa Granshaw, TODAY contributor

    This is one lucky loggerhead! Just weeks after a 4 inch-long fishing hook got caught in this turtle's throat, it was released back into the ocean Thursday, looking healthy and rehabilitated.

    The 100-pound turtle arrived at SeaWorld Orlando after being rescued from an intake canal at the St. Lucie Power Plant in St. Lucie County, Florida. In Orlando, the turtle immediately underwent surgery after x-rays revealed the stuck hook. The fishing hook was one of the largest the team has ever removed, according to SeaWorld veterinarians. 

    Jason Collier / Sea World

    SeaWorld's senior veterinarian, Lara Croft, and aquarium staff members removing the large hook from the turtle's throat.

    Sadly, this isn't an isolated case either. Traditional J-shaped fishing hooks are more likely to be swallowed by sea turtles, causing suffocation or internal bleeding. Using circle-shaped hooks and properly disposing of all trash and fishing lines can reduce the risk of the creatures swallowing such dangerous items.

    As for this turtle, all of us here hope it has a hook-free life now that it's back home!

    Jason Collier / Sea World

    Sea turtles are more likely to swallow J-shaped hooks, causing damage, than safer, circle-shaped fishing hooks.

    Jason Collier / SeaWorld

    The SeaWorld Animal Care team released this lucky loggerhead back into the ocean Thursday morning.

    A 100-pound loggerhead is released back into Florida waters after SeaWorld vets successfully remove a 4-inch fishing hook from the turtle's throat. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    More: Rehabilitated sea turtles return to the wild in Florida
    Woman battles for 3 hours to save stuck horse from rising tide
    Firefighter revives tiny Chihuahua using oxygen mask meant for babies
    Follow @TODAYPets
     
     
     
    Lisa Granshaw is a writer and producer for TODAY.com. She's glad this turtle's story has a happy ending!

    4 comments

    Hooray for this great team of people!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: rescue, sea-turtle, sea-world, tale-of-survival
  • 5
    Feb
    2011
    12:37pm, EST

    Itsuo Inouye / AP

    Moon jellyfish are illuminated by colored lights at Kamogawa Sea World in Kamogawa, east of Tokyo, Saturday, Feb. 5.

    Moon jellyfish look to be of another world in Japan

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, animals, tokyo, jellyfish, sea-world, kamogawa
  • 17
    Oct
    2010
    9:32pm, EDT

    Itsuo Inouye / AP

    A sea lion "smiles" during a show at Kamogawa Sea Wolrd in Kamogawa, east of Tokyo, Japan, Sunday, Oct. 17.

    All smiles

    Cute or kind of creepy? You decide.

    6 comments

    This reminds me of a dog that is just about to take a bite of my face being that close. There is no "smilie" behind those teeth.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, animal, tokyo, smiling, sea-lion, sea-world

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Lisa Granshaw, TODAY contributor

Lisa Granshaw is a frequent TODAY.com contributor.

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Katie Cannon

is a Senior Multimedia Editor and has worked at msnbc.com since 1996.

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