Turtle's broken shell held together with wires, pins and glue - Action News
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Manitoba

Turtle's broken shell held together with wires, pins and glue

An injured turtle is literally being pieced back together with wires, steel pins, epoxy glue and a clamp at a Manitoba wildlife shelter, after its shell was badly cracked this week.

Painted turtle found on Manitoba highway likely hit by a car, wildlife rehab centre's staff say

Wildlife centre uses pins, wires to repair injured turtle's shell

10 years ago
Duration 1:59
An injured turtle is literally being pieced back together with wires, steel pins, epoxy glue and a bracket at a Manitoba wildlife shelter, after its shell was badly cracked this week.

An injured turtle is literally being pieced back together with wires, steel pins, epoxy glue and a bracket at a Manitoba wildlife shelter, after its shell was badly cracked this week.

The western painted turtle was brought to the Wildlife Haven Rehabilitation Centre on Monday after it was found on the side of Highway 8 in Petersfield, Man.Staff believe theshell was cracked after the turtlewas struck by a car.

This western painted turtle's cracked shell was repaired by staff at the Wildlife Haven Rehabilitation Centre near Ile des Chnes, Man., this week. (Wildlife Haven Rehabilitation Centre)
"In this case, it seemed everything else was intact. It was simply the shell that needed to be kind of put back together and held in place,"Don Diawol, the centre's rehab director, told CBC News on Wednesday.

Diawol said he put the shell pieces back together, much like puzzle pieces, and secured them usinga common technique called Turtle Shell Repair.

"We had to epoxy cement little pins onto the shell at strategic points to pull it all together," he explained.

"We decided to just use a light wire to just kind of tie it all together so it holds it stable and together."

A larger crack down the back of the shell isheld together with a metal bracket and glue, he added.

Turtle shell a 'growing organ'

The turtle has been given medication for pain, but Diawol said the animal will ultimately be OK because the shell is tough and thick.

"The shell itself is a growing organ, so it will grow itself back together and heal," he said.

It could take six months to a year before the turtle can be released back into the wild.

Western painted turtles are common in Manitoba, said Diawol, who estimates that he does about three or four shell repairs a year at the wildlife centrenear Ile des Chnes, Man.

He said the latest job was a bit more extensive than most. It took him about an hour to put the shell back together.

"When we look at a situation like this, where the animal would have otherwise perished because of the injuries, we're able to try some interesting techniques and have its chances of survival that much better," he said.