Orphaned Alaskan sea otter given second chance at life in Chicago

Orphaned Alaskan sea otter given second chance at life in Chicago

Shedd welcomes sea otter pup found alone in Alaska

Shedd welcomes sea otter pup found alone in Alaska

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An orphaned sea otter from Alaska is getting a second chance at life. The pup arrived at the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago at the end of November and has been receiving round-the-clock care as he gets used to his new surroundings, the aquarium said Thursday.

Weighing just 10 pounds, the 8-week-old pup was found alone on Oct. 31 in the remote coastal town of Seldovia, Alaska. He was stranded and crying out for help when wildlife rescue workers found him.

Sea otter pups typically need their mothers during their first year of life for food, care, and to learn where to forage and how to hunt. The federal government considers them “non-releasable” back into the wild as they wouldn’t be able to survive. 

Sea otter pup at the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago
An 8-week-old sea otter pup gets a second chance at life at the Shedd Aqaurium in Chicago.

Courtesy Shedd Aquarium


Alaska SeaLife Center, the organization that rescued the pup, put out a call for assistance and the Shedd Aquarium responded. The aquarium’s care team accompanied the pup for his cross-country journey from Seward, Alaska, to Chicago.

according to the U.S. Government’s Marine Mammal Commission. The population has slowly begun to stabilize, and in 2013 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service designated a recovery plan in Alaska for sea otters. Some critics now say sea otters are overpopulated in Alaska.

Only 11 institutions across North America, including Shedd Aquarium, provide homes for non-releasable sea otters, the aquarium said.

Jeramie Bizzle

Source: cbsnews.com