Won't You Please Help Name Me?
I’ll give you the short version before you get the long one: This little guy was found stranded this spring, and was rescued. The USFWS later deemed him non-releasable, and he eventually made his way to the Aquarium of the Pacific, who needs your help naming him! Here’s this pup’s story, and instructions on how to help name him, from the aquarium:
The Aquarium of the Pacific is announcing the arrival of a new rescued sea otter pup, who was found stranded without its mother in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, on April 12, 2022. Sea otter experts estimated the young male pup to be three weeks old when he was found.
After the pup’s rescue, he was taken to Monterey Bay Aquarium where staff attempted to pair him with a surrogate mother in the hopes of one day returning him to the wild. However, this pairing was ultimately not successful, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service deemed the pup non-releasable.
On his arrival at the Aquarium of the Pacific, the sea otter pup moved into a behind-the-scenes pool with the Aquarium’s resident adult sea otter Chloe. “Chloe and the pup are socializing well together and have formed a close bond,” says Brett Long, Aquarium of the Pacific curator of mammals and birds.
The pup is now four months old and can be seen in the Aquarium’s Sea Otter Habitat. Four other rescued young sea otters have arrived at the Aquarium since December 2021, and various groupings of the pups will be in the Sea Otter Habitat in coming months. The new male pup can be identified by slightly lighter-colored fur on his face.
The Aquarium is offering the chance to help name the new sea otter pup through its Adopt an Animal program. Those who virtually adopt the sea otter pup by September 30 at the $100 level or above can suggest a name. If that suggestion is chosen by the Aquarium’s animal care team, the person who suggested it will be invited to a feeding and training session with one of the many animal species living at the Aquarium. More details are available at pacific.to/adoptpup.
Photo via Aquarium of the Pacific