Researchers in Bangkok have helped an injured sea turtle swim again with an innovative artificial flipper.

It was built considering the animal’s injury, weight and swimming style.

The prosthesis offers hope to other turtles trapped and maimed by fishing nets.

Goody is swimming contentedly across a pool in Bangkok under the watchful eye of a team of vets. She looks much like any other sea turtle, but with one big difference – a unique artificial flipper.

Just months earlier, Goody was stressed and finding it hard to move after she was entangled in fishing gear and lost one of her flippers. She is one of the lucky survivors of a fate that traps at least 1,000 turtles every year.

Goody, an olive ridley sea turtle, shows off her bespoke artificial flipper. Image: Reuters

Nine out of 10 turtles trapped in nets die, research shows. But olive ridley sea turtle Goody was rescued and taken to Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, where a team of scientists set about developing a prosthetic limb to get her swimming again.

"She's swimming much better and learning to use the two flippers to turn,” says Nantarika Chansue, one of the vets on the development team. “You can see the difference. We are trying to develop one of the best turtle prosthetic flippers ever created.”

While Goody is unlikely to be fit enough to return to the sea, Chansue and her team say the artificial limb will make a massive difference to her quality of life in captivity.

"It's just like when we have our babies,” adds Chansue. “You're like a proud parent."

Confusing plastic with food can cause internal bleeding and blockages in the turtles intestines Image: WWF

Raising hopes

There are 10 other turtles like Goody in the programme and each will need a prosthesis designed specifically to match the nature of their injury, swimming habits and weight. But the success of the scheme so far means there is new hope that the other injured turtles will swim again soon.

Plastic What is the World Economic Forum doing about plastic pollution? More than 90% of plastic is never recycled, and a whopping 8 million metric tons of plastic waste are dumped into the oceans annually. At this rate, there will be more plastic than fish in the world’s oceans by 2050. The Global Plastic Action Partnership (GPAP) is a collaboration between businesses, international donors, national and local governments, community groups and world-class experts seeking meaningful actions to beat plastic pollution. It aims to show how businesses, communities and governments can redesign the global “take-make-dispose” economy as a circular one in which products and materials are redesigned, recovered and reused to reduce environmental impacts. Contact us to join the partnership.



Sea turtles are commonly trapped in nets or plastic waste, according to WWF. It’s estimated that more than half have ingested some form of ocean plastic. And researchers have found that eating just once piece of plastic can be lethal.