Florida
Hurricane Helene leaves manatees stranded in Florida
Florida’s Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) said its teams are responding to reports of stranded manatees after Hurricane Helene ripped through the state last week.
Helene made landfall in Florida’s panhandle as a Category 4 storm last Tuesday night, bringing with it heavy rainfall, high winds and flooding that also struck other Southeastern states. As of Tuesday, the death toll from Helene had reached 159, the Associated Press reported, as search and rescue operations continue throughout hard-hit states.
The storm has also wreaked havoc on the wildlife caught in its path. The FWC said in a post to its social media accounts on Monday that its biologists were working to rescue manatees—a protected animal under Florida state law—that were beached.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
“Manatees can become stranded during rough weather conditions, such as a hurricane or tropical storm,” the FWC said Monday in a post on its Facebook page.
It added in its post, “While our top priority has been to help residents and visitors of Florida recover from the impacts of Helene, we are also working swiftly to rehabilitate and conserve these gentle giants.”
Images of rescued manatees were shared by the FWC on X (formerly Twitter) on Monday afternoon.
Manatees are native to Florida and inhabit rivers, springs and coastal areas throughout the state. The nonprofit Save the Manatee Club, based in Florida, said in a release to its website last week that it was working with its partners, including the FWC, to “actively” monitor the aftermath of Helene and its impact on the manatee population.
“As Florida natives, manatees are well-adapted to the extreme weather events in our state,” the release read in part. “However, they do face significant risk during powerful storms. Storm surges can cause manatees to go far inland to areas they would not normally inhabit, where they can become trapped when the water recedes.”
The FWC urged the public to not attempt to handle any stranded manatees and instead call the state’s Wildlife Alert Hotline at 888-404-392 to alert officials of the animals’ location.
It added that “manatees stranded by storms may need immediate medical attention from wildlife experts.” Residents can report incidents of other injured wildlife to the Wildlife Alert Hotline or submit a report online through this link.
Newsweek reached out to the FWC for additional information via email on Tuesday.
The FWC was deployed over the weekend as part of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’ Operation Blue Ridge, a multistate agency effort to assist recovery efforts in North Carolina and Tennessee, according to a release from the governor’s office Sunday.
The FWC wrote in a Facebook post on Sunday that Operation Blue Ridge “also aims to help Floridians needing rescue in Western North Carolina, the Blue Ridge Mountains, and the Tennessee Valley.”
“FWC stands ready to continue assisting our neighbors as they recover from Hurricane Helene’s effects,” the post added.
Florida
Mark Pope doesn’t expect emotions to impact Denzel Aberdeen in Florida reunion and homecoming
Denzel Aberdeen is in a unique spot going into his first trip back to Florida since his controversial departure last portal cycle. On one hand, he was on the floor at the final horn during the Gators’ national championship win and a key figure of that run, a lifetime dream as a hometown kid from Orlando with a ring that can never be taken away from him.
“It’s been surreal. The past couple of months, just reaching one of my goals in life, winning the national championship, it’s been nothing but amazing,” Aberdeen said at SEC Tipoff ’26.
On the other, Todd Golden likely won’t be waiting for him at the airport with a Valentine’s Day card, flowers and chocolates upon his return to Gainesville. His former coach got testy on multiple occasions when asked about the breakup — the two sides not seeing eye to eye during negotiations in terms of valuation.
“We love Denzel,” he told KSR. “Incredibly grateful for the contributions he made to our program. He was a huge part of our national championship team. He was a guy that came with us right when we got the job. The reality is, we would have loved to have Denzel back, and there were other things that were more important to him than what we had to offer at this point. … Every person — whether you’re a player or coach — has different things that are important to them when making decisions. Unfortunately, ours didn’t align. We would’ve loved to have him back.”
His old teammates are excited for his return to the O-Dome — nothing personal on their end, Alex Condon adding, “It’s going to be really fun” to play him, though it “was a shock” to see him go. He grew up 111 miles away, so Aberdeen will undoubtedly have all of the friends and family in the stands that he can handle. It’s not just a Gator reunion, but also a homecoming with all of his loved ones.
How will he respond to all of the extra stuff that comes with this trip? His new head coach, Mark Pope, doesn’t think anything can push him off his path of growth and the current production he’s earning in the SEC. He’s playing the best basketball of his career, and Pope expects him to continue doing just that in Gainesville.
“I think D.A. is pretty steady right now. His play over the last month has been phenomenal,” he said Thursday. “He’s had a huge number of games where he went on a four- or five-game tear where it was just — his numbers were outrageous, his decision-making, he just is getting more and more comfortable.”
Aberdeen is averaging 13.0 points and 3.1 assists during SEC play while shooting 39.1 percent from deep, six games with 15-plus dating back to January 10, no performance bigger or better than his 22-point night in Knoxville, scoring 18 in the second half alone to help the Wildcats storm back from down 17 points to beat Tennessee 80-78.
Kentucky appeared to be, for lack of a better term, screwed when Jaland Lowe underwent season-ending shoulder surgery. Since then, though, Pope’s team has been among the hottest in all of college basketball, and Aberdeen is a big part of that. He’s owned that starting point guard role and is only getting better with time and experience.
“You can see him making the transition from doing his job, to playing the game. From doing the game to playing the game, like, we’ve seen that happen in real time over the last month, where in practice, too, now you see him just feeling so comfortable with what we’re doing, and so confident,” Pope continued. “Such a believer now in trying to attack the game how we attack the game. It’s been fun to watch him grow. He’s going to be — he’s just a solid dude, man.”
So, yeah, a top-25 battle in front of the people most important to him, familiar faces and a coach ready to punish him for seeking greener pastures? He’ll be ready.
Because this is what he does.
“He’s a competitor, competitor, competitor. The brighter the lights, the more excited he gets, the more capable he gets,” Pope said. “He functions well there, so I expect him as the season progresses to just get better.”
Florida
Trump insists Florida oil magnate ‘has no authority’ over Venezuela policy
President Trump has insisted that a Florida oil magnate has no influence over US policy toward Venezuela.
“There is a story about a man named Harry Sargeant III in The Wall Street Journal,” Trump wrote on Truth Social Thursday. “He has no authority, in any way, shape, or form, to act on behalf of the United States of America, nor does anyone else that is not approved by the State Department.”
“Without this approval, no one is authorized to represent our Country,” he added.
Sargeant, a Marine veteran and the owner of International Oil Trading Company, has long sought to open up Venezuela’s oil market — even cozying up to now-arrested dictator Nicolas Maduro in the past while betting that sanctions relief or renewed US engagement would reopen the country’s energy sector to American firms.
Supporters in the WSJ report referenced by Trump described Sargeant as a dealmaker who could help revive Venezuela’s collapsed industry, while critics argued his approach risked enriching insiders and legitimizing the authoritarian government in Caracas.
Florida
Melby the manatee rescued from Melbourne Beach storm drain, now recovering
Trapped manatee rescued from storm drain beneath Melbourne Beach road
Numerous agencies came together to rescue a manatee trapped in a stormwater baffle box in Melbourne Beach.
A juvenile male manatee dubbed “Melby” is on the mend at SeaWorld in Orlando, after unknown hours trapped in a Melbourne Beach storm drain.
Florida wildlife officials say it was a quick call from the public to a wildlife hotline and a fast response from local, state and federal agencies that kept Melby’s life from just going ‘down the drain.’
Now, Melby’s on the mend — and hungry.
“He showed some interest in food during his first night, which is an encouraging sign,” Kristen Turner, spokeswoman for Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, said Tuesday via email. “His condition continues to be evaluated.”
Firefighters, multiple agencies step up to save ‘Melby’
Just after 9 p.m. Monday, Feb. 9, Brevard firefighters helped to excavate and remove Melby from a storm drain with the help of multiple partners.
Melby measures about seven feet in length and weighs about 410 pounds. Rescue workers from several agencies, including FWC, Brevard County Fire Rescue and others, converged on Neptune Drive in the beachside community to extract the manatee.
“During the initial onsite health assessment, responders noted the manatee was underweight and had multiple open wounds on the underside near the tail and flippers,” Turner added. “The manatee was alert and moving at the time of rescue but had been exposed to shallow, cold water and likely had been inside the culvert for an extended period of time.”
FWC can’t say for sure if cold drove Melby down the drain but that’s the most likely reason.
“While rare, manatees are naturally curious may enter culverts and similar structures, and these situations often go unnoticed,” Turner added. “In many cases, animals are not found alive. This rescue had a positive outcome because someone immediately called the FWC Wildlife Alert Hotline, allowing responders to act quickly.”
The manatee was pulled from the underground baffle box after utility workers dug through several feet of concrete to reach the trapped mammal.
Workers continued their efforts for several hours as the nighttime chill descended on the area. Heavy equipment was brought in to slice into the roadway and remove the drain lid as lights glared.
A tow truck lifted Melby out of the drain.
It was not immediately known how or when the manatee — a native, threatened Florida species which lives in many of the state’s waterways — wandered into the storm drain.
The rescue drew attention from residents along with media, even with efforts to pull Melby from the drain being livestreamed on YouTube. Manatees are typically drawn to warmer waters during the winter.
What if you see a sick, stranded or dead manatee, or other distressed wildlife?
If you see an injured, distressed, or dead manatee, or any wildlife in need of assistance, please call the FWC Wildlife Alert Hotline at 888-404-FWCC (3922). Your call may save an animal’s life.
Jim Waymer covers environment and local government. Contact him at (321) 261-5903 or jwaymer@floridatoday.com. Follow him on X at @JWayEnviro.
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