Patricia Wuest
Vice President of Media Strategy, NAVC
Patricia Wuest was the Vice President of Media Strategy at the NAVC until retiring in 2022.
Read Articles Written by Patricia WuestApril 5 was a cold and wet April day at Maryland’s Assateague State Park, but it was a heartwarming one for the staff at the National Aquarium’s Animal Care and Rescue Center in Baltimore. After spending more than two months at the rescue center, a young female harp seal named Marie Tharp was finally healthy enough to be released back into the ocean.
As we reported in March, the veterinary team at the Animal Care and Rescue Center in Baltimore was treating two harp seals for a variety of ailments, including dehydration, respiratory illness and an internal infection. The staff named them Marie Tharp and Sally Ride, who were nicknamed for famous scientists, which is the rescue center’s animal-naming theme for the 2018-19 season. Marie Tharp was a famous geologist and cartographer and Sally Ride was an American astronaut, physicist and engineer.
Returning Marie to Her Ocean Home
Marie Tharp was admitted to the rescue center on January 29 and given fluid therapy and antibiotics until staff determined she was healthy enough to be released back into the wild. On April 5, Marie was brought to the beach at Assateague, where National Aquarium staffers opened her crate and let her get acclimated to the environment. The young harp seal was initially hesitant, but soon bounded into the ocean.
National Aquarium staffers watch as Marie Tharp cautiously makes her way to the ocean. Photo Credit: Courtesy of the National Aquarium
“After exiting her carrier, Marie spent some time reacquainting herself with her ocean home — rolling around in the sand a bit and sniffing the salty air,” the rescue center said in a release. “She then shuffled down to the shoreline to meet the waves. Marie took a dive in, and after popping up a few times here and there, disappeared back into the ocean.”
Marie makes her way into the ocean. Photo Credit: Courtesy of National Aquarium
According to National Aquarium staffer Kimberly Lacomare, Marie Tharp was last seen with her head bobbing in the ocean just off the Assateague shoreline. “I was at the release and it was amazing to see her dive right back in!” says Lacomare. “She was equipped with a tag on her flipper so we can track her progress if she pops up again.”
Animal Rescue is also caring for rescued harp seal Sally Ride and grey seal Edwin Hubble. They’re both doing well and our team is hopeful that they’re nearing the final stages of rehabilitation.
“Sally Ride could be released shortly,” says Lacomare. “We’ll know more in the coming weeks.”
The Mission of the Rescue Center
As an extension of the National Aquarium’s mission, the Animal Care and Rescue Center provides a permanent and world-class home for the care of the Aquarium’s current and future animals and some of its animal rescue operations, says Weaver.
Home to up to 1,500 animals at any given time, the center’s ample pools provide a place for care and acclimation for species from beta fish to sharks, and more than doubles the capacity for off-exhibit and rescue animal care.
The 56,339-square-foot building also houses the exhibit fabrication workshop and classroom and community space.
The Animal Care and Rescue Center is home to state-of-the-art seal rehabilitation suites.