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eff Krenner Of the Georgia Aquarium and Richard Chewning of the Jekyll Island 4-H Center(l-r) are shown taking a final measurement of Dylan's carapace the day before the turtle was released into the Atlantic Ocean. Georgia Sea Turtle Center veterinarian Terry Norton is shown supervising Dylan's final medical checkup.
MISSION After helping to educate more than 30,000 4-Hers and Jekyll Island visitors about wildlife conservation, Dylan the sea turtle moved from the Jekyll Island 4-H Center to the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta in November 2005. While there, another 4.6 million people were able to see her and learn more about conservation.
 
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Teaching turtle returns to the wild

Visit these Web sites for more information
Complete story
Track Dylan’s progress
Jekyll Island 4-H Center
Tidelands nature Center
Georgia Sea Turtle Center
Georgia Aquarium
Georgia 4-H
Ten years ago on Jekyll Island, two loggerhead turtle hatchlings were trapped in their nest on the beach and unable to get to the water. Georgia Graves saw them, rescued them, named them Bob and Dylan and brought them to the Georgia 4-H center on the island.

Now a whopping 150 pounds, Dylan was released into the Atlantic Ocean June 30 off the island where she was born. Squashing the myth that turtles are slow, she quickly waddled into the water.

A crowd of 300 chanted “Go Dylan! Go!”

Her brother, Bob, was released three years ago.

Dylan spent the first seven years of her captive life at the Jekyll Island 4-H Center, one of six environmental education facilities operated by the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.

“She was definitely the biggest draw in the aquarium room,” said Tom Woolf, animal care coordinator for the 4-H center and UGA’s Tidelands Nature Center. “She liked to splash you with water if you walked by the tank as if to say ‘feed me.’ I cut up a lot of fish for that turtle.”

After helping to educate more than 30,000 4-Hers and Jekyll Island visitors about wildlife conservation, Dylan moved to the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta in November 2005. While there, another 4.6 million people were able to see her and learn more about conservation.

“She loved to play with ice blocks and rubber balls,” said Jeff Krenner, who cared for Dylan at the aquarium. “And she really liked for her shell to be scratched.”

She returned to the Georgia Sea Turtle Center on Jekyll Island in May 2007. While being prepared for her release, Dylan continued to educate visitors to that center. She learned not to be afraid of blue crabs and to consider them prey, along with horseshoe crabs and whelks.

Woolf says Dylan is a perfect example of the benefits of keeping wild animals in captivity. “All the effort is well worth it when you see how many people were reached through this one animal,” he said. “The more people are aware and emotionally connected to wild animals, the more people will want to protect them and their habitats.”

Although Dylan’s story is a successful one, Woolf warns that wild animals are often harmed by people who think they are helping.

“For example, on some barrier islands a lot of baby gopher tortoises are thrown into the ocean by people who think they are helping,” he said. “These are total land animals. Sometimes by trying to help a wild animal, you may be doing more harm than good.”

He encourages people to contact a state wildlife agency or local nature center for assistance before helping any wild animal.

Despite being back in her native habitat, Dylan’s job as an educator isn’t over. She will still reach students through the tracking device mounted on her shell.

“Next year, my wife’s students at St. Simons Elementary will be watching Dylan and tracking where she goes,” said Mark Dodd, a wildlife biologist with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. “She’s done a spectacular job teaching marine conservation, and this is exactly why we bring stragglers in.
Building the New Learning Environment

The new learning environment is an academic and intellectual community on the campus of the University of Georgia humming with the vibrancy of the true college experience—bright and talented students working with brilliant faculty formally in the classroom and informally over a cup of coffee or lounging in the greenspace which stretches from one end of campus to the other. It is a place which recognizes that new information technologies are transforming traditional academic disciplines and embraces those opportunities.

Previous "Building the New Learning Environment" features:

2007-2008

Riding High: The 2008 U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Colleges” rankings
Ready for a victory!: The Chapel Bell gets a face lift
The new class breaks records
Historic town spring restored
Supreme Success: Serving the nation’s highest court
Teaching Turtle
Agrosecurity Certificate Program
CURO Promising Scholars
Validating standardized testing
Mail management at Zaxby’s
UGA program boosts environmental, community volunteers
Writers of the storm: Grady College students travel to New Orleans
Treading New Water: UGA-Georgia Aquarium partnership
Raising the Bar: UGA's School of Law Land Use Clinic
Students go green
RSVP: Relationship and Sexual Violence Prevention
Summer Camps
Buckle up for safety: Virtual Video Showdown
Digital Bootcamp
Preparing future political leaders: the Washington Semester Program
Canine Spay Day at UGA
Adventure across America: the Interdisciplinary Field Program
Focus the Nation: The national teach-in on global warming solutions

2006-2007

Thai-ing it all together: Study abroad and service learning in Thailand
Fighting HIV with mobile media
Rhodes Scholars for 2008
Student-designed fashions
Where the wild things are: The Global Water for Sustainability Program
The Write Stuff: The Bulldog Book Club
The Second Life span
Mars Attacks!: The War of the Worlds aired live on WUGA-FM
Women and Girls in Georgia Conference
You gotta have art
Climbing Capitol Hill: Washington Semester Program
Re-engineering engineering education
Stay alert with UGAAlert
Working vacation: The Graduate School’s Summer Undergraduate Research Program
Cyber-bullying combines meanness and technology
First in ecology
CURO in Costa Rica: UGA and UCR students present research projects
Being heard: the struggles of the working poor
Blogging experiences from abroad
Learning together
Creative writing meets science
Trading Up
Young Scientists: 2007 CURO Symposium
Roosevelt@UGA: “Not left, not right, but forward”
Transcontinental bike ride: Believe in the Cure
Turning the page: the Honors Program’s new book discussion program
On the record: “Going Back: Remembering UGA”
Across the pond: UGA at Oxford
Teaching math effectively
JURO@GA: online journal for undergraduate researchers
Preventing bullying
Taste of Home
Bobby Wilson’s Atlanta Urban Gardening Program
Mary Kahrs Warnell Forest Education Center
Real life science: Weekend field trip to Sapelo Island
Getting jail time: Schnavia Smith Hatcher
Taking it slow: Farm 255
The little things that matter: Mary Ann Moran
Project Promote
Home Sweet Home: Celebrating 200 years of on-campus student living

2005-2006
Making access easier: The Alternative Media Access Center (AMAC)
Building Connections and Broadening Horizons: Public Health in Vietnam
Natural beauty: UGA’s Institute of Ecology Eco-Reach Program
Dawg Camp Adventure
Working out – not just for youngsters any more
Music to parents' ears: UGA’s Community Music School
Striking a chord: Interdisciplinary Certificate in Music Business at the Terry College of Business
Building a better future in bioscience
All about the weather
A little means a lot: 2006 UGA Faculty-Staff Campaign
The Write Stuff – All But Dissertation (ABD)
Hope found in BOYS program
UGA down under
New poultry text holds international appeal
Seeing the forest through the book leaves: Environmental Literacy
Study Abroad in Science: Maymester in Cortona, Italy
Helping Hispanic achievement
Another way of understanding the world: UGA’s Qualitative Research Program
Sharing our knowledge: the UGA-Tunisia connection
The greatest pumpkin
Georgia as it once was: Digital Library of Georgia
It takes brain power: A new doctoral degree program in neuroscience
Taking inventory: Adding tree to a geographic information systems database
Lending a hand, not a handout: Department of University Housing’s Adult Education program
Camping in Russia
Smitten not bitten: WOWbugs
Teaching that teems with life: Jim Porter

2004-2005
Smart Art : Cortona Study Abroad Program
Healthy choices: Pharmacy Care Clinic
Giving Back: Painter and Professor Radcliffe Bailey
Housing launches online roommate search
Sea Dreams
UGA Dominates Southeastern Conclave Competition
Honoring a legend: The inaugural Boyd Lecture
Ain’t nothing like the real thing: Real-world experience for broadcast news majors
Spring Break: Security Leadership Washington Week
A little do, re, mi: Stephanie Tingler uses innovative teaching methods to turn fine singers into great ones
Class Writes Its Own Textbook
Becoming a Bulldog
Mr. President had a farm…
Agrarian Connections
Going Home: West African Studies Abroad Program
A changing world: Knowledge of international law is no longer a luxury
Finding balance: Understanding the principles and fundamentals of design
Chocolate Science

2003-2004
“Lost” Honeymooners
Making space for all: Terry College of Business
Birds in Our Lives
Sub-zero Scholarship: Discovering Antarctica
2004: The Fab Freshmen
A fine kettle of fish: Fisheries program at Warnell School is only program of its kind in state
Law prof’s books translated globally
Summer is a time for camp!
Whale of a lesson
Those who can…teach!: 2004 Honors and Awards
Go mobile or go home!: UGA's New Media Institute
On a roll: UGA's Forestry Conclave
Spring brings green and guests to campus
That rainy day feeling
A primer for life on the outside
The art of teaching science
Look it up! The New Georgia Encyclopedia, a Web-only reference about all things Georgian, is launched
Making printmakers
Learning How to Live in the Real World
Learning there is more than one way to learn: Dr. Medleau's inspiring tale
The King and I
The University of Georgia at Gwinnett
UGA students receive Crane Leadership Scholarships
Parlez-vous français? ¿Hablas español?: Mary Lyndon Hall
Up close and personal: Freshman seminars
Residential learning: Franklin Residential College
The call from "out of the blue": Eve Troutt Powell named a recipient of MacArthur Foundation Fellowship
On the rise: Summer Undergraduate Research Program
Investigating HOPE: A study of the effects of Georgia’s HOPE scholarship program
Visiting scholars bring the world to UGA
Have Lunch with the VP–for Free
Surfing in the sun: Herty Field is the first segment of a new wireless network
Making a scene: Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities Symposium
Statistics tell the story: The East Campus Village
At the heart of campus: The Student Learning Center



This page was last updated on Tuesday, July 8, 2008 04:33 PM EDT

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