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Thursday
Jun302016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Turtle Rescue On LI 

SUFFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

It’s tough being a turtle on Long Island.

“Turtle Rescue,” answered Karen Testa last week on the “emergency line” at the century-old farmhouse at 111 Manor Lane in Jamesport in which she and her staff care for turtles.

It was another in a blizzard of daily and nightly calls about a turtle in need.  “I sleep with the phone next to my bed,” explained Karen. “I’m here 24-7.”

The turtles have come from all over Long Island—including Smithtown, said Ms. Testa.

Ms. Testa enumerated the many threats facing turtles here. Cars on all the highways regularly run into and over turtles. Bulldozers involved in construction are devastating to turtles. “They can’t run away—they move super-slow.” Boat propellers rip into turtles in Long Island waters. Pieces of fishing line ensnare them.  Pesticides, weed-killers and other chemicals leave turtles sick. People take hatchling turtles from Long Island shores—“people don’t understand that these are wild animals and it’s illegal to take them”—and they “feed them incorrectly” leaving them in terrible shape. Ms. Testa’s list of the perils that turtle face goes on and on,

She was three years old, she recounted, when she had an experience that began her commitment to take care of turtles.

Ms. Testa was visiting her grandmother in Worcester, Massachusetts and there, in a park, “I saw a turtle with three legs…I felt so sorry for this animal and what it had gone through—a leg ripped from its body.”

This resulted in a “place in my heart” for turtles.

A New York State licensed wildlife rehabilitator with other state certification to care for turtles, Ms. Testa, from the Village of Poquott near Setauket, went to Southampton College where she majored in marine biology. She volunteered at the Evelyn Alexander Wildlife Rescue Center in Hampton Bays and then “branched off” to establish Turtle Rescue of the Hamptons. (Although it’s on the North Fork, Hamptons has continued to be included in its formal name because of its origin with her work at the Wildlife Rescue Center.) Turtles, she explained, “need special care” different from the care provided for “mammals and avians.”

Turtle Rescue is a not-for-profit 501-c-3 charitable endeavor that is always looking for donations.

As Turtle Rescue’s website states: “Our mission is to rescue, rehabilitate and release wild chelonian species native to Long Island, to provide sanctuary with a high quality of life for those who have sustained permanent disability, and to allow injured animals to live out their lives with dignity and respect. We work to promote a safe and healthy natural environment by providing public education services regarding the threats and challenges facing our native population.” It goes on to note that Turtle Rescue’s “state of the art rehabilitation facility” is called “Turtle Manor.” (Until writing this column, I didn’t know about the word chelonian but, as Google explains, it denotes “a turtle, terrapin, or tortoise.”)

I didn’t know about Turtle Rescue either until my old friend Jennifer Puleston Clement of Brookhaven sent me a message on Facebook relating how she had found a Box Turtle that “some low-life driver smashed up” and was referred by a local “rehab center” to the “full-time turtle-exclusive” facility of Ms. Testa. “This woman is sincere in her devotion to the rehabilitation of our dwindling population of turtles,” said Ms. Clement, suggesting a piece be written.

At Turtle Manor “every room has a special purpose,” said Ms. Testa. This includes a room called an ICU and facilities to perform X-rays and provide oxygen to ill turtles. Outside are small ponds for turtles. 

Ms. Testa, the executive director of Turtle Rescue, is assisted by three licensed veterinarians, two licensed veterinarian technicians and three marine biologists.

“We’ve been super-busy from the day we opened,” she relates. There are “Good Samaritans” (like Ms. Puleston) bringing turtles to Turtle Rescue and there is the constant stream of phone calls leading to the picking up of turtles in trouble and bringing them back to Turtle Manor for care. The number of the “emergency line” at Turtle Rescue is 631-779-3737. Its website is: www.turtlerescueofthehamptons.org

Representative of the plight of turtles here is the situation involving the Box Turtle, that sweet creature long so common on Long Island. However, noted Ms. Testa last week, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation recently listed Box Turtles as “a species of special concern.”

“Box Turtles were common on Long Island—but not any longer,” said Ms. Testa, “because of habitat destruction.” 

Topping the Turtle Rescue website is the appeal: “Help us save turtles. Please don’t turn your back on an injured turtle! They depend on us to make a difference.”

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Karl Grossman is a veteran investigative reporter and columnist, the winner of numerous awards for his work and a member of the L.I. Journalism Hall of Fame. He is a professor of journalism at SUNY/College at Old Westbury and the author of six books. 

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