The Marine Mammal Center
section titleWhat We Do Main Navigation learningwhat we do get involved
Rescue
Rehabilitate
Release
Teach
Research

current patients

facilities

husbandry
    feeding
    cleaning
    volunteer mgmt.
    reducing stress
    monitoring

clinical medicine and surgery

case studies

Page Title - Rehabilitate
Secondary Page Title - Husbandry

At The Marine Mammal Center, appropriate husbandry is the core of our care and management of animals. Husbandry protocols including nutrition, handling techniques, hygiene, sanitation, housing, disease prevention, and stress reduction are based on a combination of species- and age-specific requirements. As we learn more about these amazing animals, our husbandry protocols are constantly refined to ensure the highest level of care for the animals in our hospital.

Proper nutrition forms the basis of an animal's successful rehabilitation while at The Center. The type, amount, and frequency of food each animal receives varies depending on species, age, body condition, and specific medical problem.

Cleaning is extremely important in a marine mammal hospital. When animals are admitted to The Center, their health is already compromised. We implement strict sanitary procedures to minimize the spread of disease, prevent infection for wounded animals, and keep bacteria levels down.

Volunteer management is another important facet. In an organization with over 800 volunteers, where volunteers are responsible for most of the day-to-day care of the animals, ensuring an effective volunteer management structure is key.

Maintaining the wildness and reducing the stress of the animals we treat is an integral and essential part of our mission. The animals The Center cares for are wild animals not accustomed to human interaction, so all of our husbandry procedures seek to limit human interaction and reduce stress, ensuring that the animals remain as wild as possible.

Monitoring of animals starts when an animal is rescued and continues until it is released. Monitoring alerts us to any problems an animal may be experiencing and allows us to closely observe the animal's progress.

 

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