Named in honor of Rainn Wilson and his support for sea turtle conservation. The turtle named 'Rainn' is an adult loggerhead and was rescued on Nov 3, 2020. Under treatment by staff at the Gumbo Limbo Nature Center Sea Turtle Rehabilitation Facility, Rainn started eating and becoming more active within a week of arrival. On January 26, 2021, Rainn was released with a satellite transmitter.

Watch a video of Rainn Wilson talking about his support of Sea Turtle Conservancy and appreciation of sea turtles.Show your suport for sea turtles by Making a Donation to STC.
Watch a video of the release of Rainn the loggerhead sea turtle. You can Adopt Rainn the Turtle.

**SCAM ALERT!** If you have been offered a STC tracked turtle by purchasing something from Bela Wonder, MyTurtleProject, Mahola, Tidalia, Earth Lives, Ocean Lives, Ocean Project.co (not to be confused with 'The Ocean Project'), Blue Ocean, Turtle's Journey, Wildlife Team, Wildlife Mission, Wildlife Charm, or Ocean Better, they have used Sea Turtle Conservancy’s turtle tracking information without our permission. The one exception is 'Fahlo (previously called Wildlife Collections),' which has an exclusive partnership with STC involving our tracked turtles.

Sea Turtle Satellite Tracking | Rainn

Hover over location circle to view date, click on turtle icon to view most recent date.
If you just see a turtle icon without a full track, please reload the page.

Cumulative distance traveled: 2,020 km (1,255 miles)
Distance covered since last location: 23.28 km (14.46 miles)
Average speed since release: 0.15 kph (0.09 mph)
Average speed since last location: 0.99 kph (0.62 mph)
Time since last location update: 14,972 hours
Time tracked: 552 days
Learn more about Rainn


Please note that, on average, transmitters will send signals for around 1 year. Sometimes it can be 2 years, and sometimes it can be less than a year. The turtle icon location point represents the most recent location received for this turtle. It is not uncommon for a transmitter to skip a day or two due to the turtle's behavoir or biofouling on the transmitter or antenna. If the most recent point is more than two months old, then the transmitter is most likely no longer working.

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Please note: The presentation of data here is for educational and entertainment purposes and does not constitute publication, and the researchers who contributed this data retain all intellectual property rights.

Map created by Sea Turtle Conservancy using Google Earth Mapping API. Data & Map © STC (unless otherwise noted). This map is automatically updated with new points as soon as they are received by the Sea Turtle Conservancy.

Map, materials, images or data may NOT be used without permission. Use of this map, material, images, or data for any purpose (including, but not limited to, reproduction and distribution) without the written consent of the Sea Turtle Conservancy or the researcher/institute contributing the data is prohibited.