Marine Mammals and Sea Turtles Should be Reported

In addition to calling the hotline, anyone who finds a stranded marine mammal, alive or dead, should follow these steps if possible:
- Do not touch the animal.
- Record your location using latitude/longitude, street address, and/or description with landmarks.
- Estimate and record the length, size, color, noticeable body parts, and movements (if alive).
- Take photos of the animal.
- Stand by the animal at a safe distance until stranding staff are able to reach you.
While the most common visitors are the bottlenose dolphin and loggerhead sea turtles, more than 25 other marine mammals and four species of sea turtles have been recorded in Maryland waters.
The department’s Marine Mammal and Sea Turtle Stranding program works in conjunction with the National Aquarium in responding to reports of marine animals throughout Maryland’s waters and coastlines.
Marine mammals are specifically protected by federal law, the Marine Mammal Protection Act. In addition, sea turtles and whales are both protected under the 1973 Endangered Species Act. It is illegal to harass, capture, or collect these marine species, alive or dead, including their bones or any body parts.
[ This article originally appeared here ]