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VIDEO: Valentinesa国际传媒檚 Day extra sweet for rehabilitated shark

The North Pacific spiny dogfish was found by a beachgoer at Stanley Park

A small shark had a Valentinesa国际传媒檚 Day for the books this year after she was released into the ocean following months of rehab at the Vancouver Aquarium.

The shark, which is a variety called a North Pacific spiny dogfish that can live to be 100 years old, was found by a beachgoer at Stanley Park.

Aquarium staff found her tangled in a fishing net, weak and disoriented from cuts and scrapes, a damaged spiracle (a type gill) and blood in one eye.

sa国际传媒淲e were very worried that she would not make it through the night, but by morning she was showing signs of improvement,sa国际传媒 said head veterinarian Dr. Martin Haulena.

The shark soon began to swim on her own, and within two weeks, was eating squid out of a biologistsa国际传媒檚 hand before eventually foraging for her own food.

sa国际传媒淚tsa国际传媒檚 been a long road to recovery for this spiny dogfish and shesa国际传媒檚 come so far. When her skin lesions were no longer visible, her spiracle and eye healed, and her strength and energy regained, we knew she was ready to return to the wild,sa国际传媒 said senior aquarium biologist Justin Lisaingo.

sa国际传媒淪eeing her healthy and able to swim away was incredibly rewarding.sa国际传媒

(Video footage courtesy of OceanWise)


katya.slepian@bpdigital.ca

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