Mia Khalifa's Pet Sea Turtle DIES, Reveals Her Tracker Signal Went Off! Ex-Pornstar Says It ‘Deserves Funeral’-READ BELOW

Mia Khalifa had sponsored a wild sea turtle named Opal and she could track her live as she swam

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Mia Khalifa's Pet Sea Turtle DIES, Reveals Her Tracker Signal Went Off! Ex-Pornstar Says It ‘Deserves Funeral’-READ BELOW
Pornhub queen Mia Khalifa is mourning the loss of her beloved pet sea turtle who died in the ocean. The Lebanese-American social media personality was devastated by the sad news and she shared the same with her loyal legion of 27.6 million followers on her Instagram story. 

As per the reports, Mia had sponsored a wild sea turtle named Opal and she could track her live as she swam.

Taking to her social media handle, the OnlyFans model shared an image of Opal’s recent swim path along with the message that the tracker is no longer sending signals. The message read: “Your animal’s tracker is no longer sending signals. Since your experience was cut short, we’d like to give you a new one to follow.”

“Redeem new animal,” the caption highlighted. 

Mia added a text box, which read: “Omg my pet wild sea turtle died, her tracker signal went out. They’re just offering me a new one like Opal and I haven’t been through it together. She deserves a funeral. RIP Opal. I love you”.
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Earlier this year, the Daily Star report suggested that a five-stone sea turtle had washed up dead on the beach in the US. A slew of marine life experts suggested that the reptile had a “whole ecosystem” living on its shell. Seaside Aquarium officials took to the centre’s Facebook page and maintained that the endangered reptile had been found at "the south end of Manzanita beach".

The post also maintained that the subsequent analysis of the deceased animal – confirmed as being a loggerhead sea turtle – showed that a "whole ecosystem" had been "travelling with it".

The five-stone sea turtle escorted live goose barnacles, skeleton shrimp and sea slugs. The loggerhead sea turtle "can be found worldwide and has nine distinct populations", suggested the aquarium officials. 

Image Source: Instagram
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