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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Trauma1 Center Treats Sea Turtles
This month, on beaches up and down the U.S. East Coast, tens of thousands of newly-hatched loggerhead sea turtles are emerging from the sand and crawling into the Atlantic. Very few of these baby turtles will survive, but a hospital in Georgia is trying to improve their chances.
Jekyll Island, Georgia, is best known as a summer vacation spot. But it’s also an important rehabilitation2 destination for hundreds of sick or injured sea turtles that wash up on Atlantic coast beaches each year.
“Twenty percent of the cases are boat strike-related injuries," says Terry Norton, a veterinarian who is director of the Georgia Sea Turtle Center. "We get fishing line and fishhook-related injuries. There’s a disease called fibropapilloma, caused by the herpes virus, that can cause tumors on the skin. We get some real debilitated3 turtles.”
Many have survived encounters with predators4 like sharks that can bite off a turtle’s flipper5 or crack its shell.
The operating room at the Georgia Sea Turtle Center looks like one you’d see at a major medical center for humans.
There are bright surgical6 lights, stainless7 steel tables and an x-ray machine. The doctors and nurses wear blue surgical scrubs. This morning, Norton is treating Ziva, a 68-kilo female loggerhead turtle.
“This is a turtle with a boat strike injury to the head and to her shell," he says. "She actually had a little abscess in the skull8. These little Velcro patches are for putting weights because she floats asymmetrically9 so that helps her dive a little better and get around a little better.”
Norton estimates that Ziva is 10-to-12 years old, which is young for a turtle. He says rehabilitating10 these injured or sick juveniles11 is vital to maintaining the worldwide sea turtle population.
“They become sexually mature at 35 years of age. That makes it really significant when there’s adult mortality. It took a lot of turtles to reach that point. It takes about 4,000 hatchlings and eggs to get to that one animal, so all these mature animals are very important to the population.”
Unfortunately, Ziva’s injuries are so extensive that she’ll never recover enough to be released back into the ocean. Instead, she’ll go to an aquarium12 to become a turtle ambassador as part of an educational exhibit.
Since sea turtles are found worldwide, Norton’s staff works with conservation groups in India, Pakistan, Costa Rica and St. Kitts, teaching them how to protect and care for injured turtles.
Ten of thousands of the tourists who visit Jekyll Island each year come to the Georgia Sea Turtle Center to learn about the life cycle of turtles.
A highlight of their visit is the rehabilitation pavilion, where sea turtles, land turtles and even alligators13 can be seen recovering after their treatments.
“Out here they are all in quarantine areas…so since we are similar to a hospital setting, we try to keep as much under control as we can," says David Zailo, one of the center’s guides. "By separating the animals from one another, it’s easier to treat them. It’s easier to mark down what they feed and it's easier to mark down their progress as they’re healing.”
Visitors who really want to get close to turtles can join the center’s staff for an early morning turtle walk on a nearby protected stretch of beach.
Earlier this summer, dozens of female loggerheads - each about one meter in diameter - lumbered14 out of the ocean, dug nests in the sand and laid hundreds of eggs.
Now, those eggs are hatching and a lucky few visitors will get to see the baby loggerheads crawl across the beach and into the ocean, to begin their perilous15 journey to adulthood16.
1 trauma | |
n.外伤,精神创伤 | |
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2 rehabilitation | |
n.康复,悔过自新,修复,复兴,复职,复位 | |
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3 debilitated | |
adj.疲惫不堪的,操劳过度的v.使(人或人的身体)非常虚弱( debilitate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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4 predators | |
n.食肉动物( predator的名词复数 );奴役他人者(尤指在财务或性关系方面) | |
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5 flipper | |
n. 鳍状肢,潜水用橡皮制鳍状肢 | |
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6 surgical | |
adj.外科的,外科医生的,手术上的 | |
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7 stainless | |
adj.无瑕疵的,不锈的 | |
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8 skull | |
n.头骨;颅骨 | |
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9 asymmetrically | |
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10 rehabilitating | |
改造(罪犯等)( rehabilitate的现在分词 ); 使恢复正常生活; 使恢复原状; 修复 | |
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11 juveniles | |
n.青少年( juvenile的名词复数 );扮演少年角色的演员;未成年人 | |
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12 aquarium | |
n.水族馆,养鱼池,玻璃缸 | |
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13 alligators | |
n.短吻鳄( alligator的名词复数 ) | |
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14 lumbered | |
砍伐(lumber的过去式与过去分词形式) | |
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15 perilous | |
adj.危险的,冒险的 | |
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16 adulthood | |
n.成年,成人期 | |
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