Lego wheelchair helps turtle heal and go free

A wheelchair fashioned out of Lego helped this Eastern box turtle recover from a broken shell. Dana Hedgpeth Maryland Zoo

A wheelchair fashioned out of Lego helped this Eastern box turtle recover from a broken shell. Dana Hedgpeth Maryland Zoo

Published Jul 11, 2020

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Baltimore - The turtle that had been injured and had a customised wheelchair built for it from Lego blocks has been released into the wild.

Dubbed “Lego turtle”, the male Eastern box turtle had been in the care of the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. It was released on Wednesday morning in the city’s Druid Hill Park, and with a transmitter on its back officials said they would be able to keep tabs on it in its native habitat.

The turtle’s tale started two years ago, when it was found by a zoo employee in the park and brought to the facility. The turtle had a broken shell and underwent surgery that involved placing metal bone plates, sewing clasps and surgical wire to keep its shell held together.

Ellen Bronson, senior director of animal health, conservation and research at the zoo, said the turtle had fractures on the bottom of its shell. Because of where the fractures were located, “we faced a difficult challenge with maintaining the turtle’s mobility while allowing him to heal properly”, Bronson said.

Garrett Fraess, who was a veterinary student and in a clinical rotation at the zoo, said at the time that it was key to “keep the bottom of the shell off the ground so it could heal properly”. The turtle’s injury was unusual because they often don’t get injuries on the top of their shells, so experts had said there weren’t repair kits to help it.

“They don’t make turtle wheelchairs,” Fraess said, so he and a team sketched a customised wheelchair. He sent the sketches to a friend who is a huge Lego fan in Denmark, and she made a wheelchair for the turtle.

The wheelchair worked because the Lego frame surrounded the turtle’s roughly grapefruit-size shell, and with plumber’s putty it attached to the edges of the upper shell, which got it off the ground and allowed it to move its legs, according to Fraess.

The Lego wheelchair even allowed it to fully close its shell when he felt threatened.

Turtles heal much slower than birds and mammals because their metabolism is slower. The turtle used its Lego wheelchair through winter and spring last year until “all of the fragments were fused together and the shell was almost completely healed”, according to Bronson. Then they took off the wheelchair and the turtle underwent “exercise time” to build up strength in its legs before its release.

Bronson called the turtle, which is 18 years old, a “unique” patient at the zoo and said it was a “joy” to work with and to see it return to its native habitat. - Washington Post

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