Environmental Almanac: Massive turtles introduced

Similar documents
Policy on Iowa s Turtle Harvest

Additional copies may be obtained from the following address:

Presentation Guidelines

Madagascar Spider Tortoise Updated: January 12, 2019

Removal of Alaskan Bald Eagles for Translocation to Other States Michael J. Jacobson U.S Fish and Wildlife Service, Juneau, AK

The Missing Woodpecker

Pythons are at the top of the food chain in the Everglades

Conservation. Species conservation is not that simple. What is a species? Do we know what the causes of decline are? What is the appropriate approach?

Lecture 15. Biology 5865 Conservation Biology. Ex-Situ Conservation

Turtles. The tortoise is a land dwelling animal. The turtle lives in the water. Both of them have a shell they carry with them.

Hoping to save giant pandas from extinction, China is training them to survive

Loss of wildlands could increase wolf-human conflicts, PA G E 4 A conversation about red wolf recovery, PA G E 8

But first the story must begin, as it did several springs ago in the marshes of Jug Bay.

Terrapin Nesting Project

ROGER IRWIN. 4 May/June 2014

VANCOUVER ISLAND MARMOT

Please initial and date as your child has completely mastered reading each column.

Red Eared Slider Secrets. Although Most Red-Eared Sliders Can Live Up to Years, Most WILL NOT Survive Two Years!

Record snake: 17-foot python Pregnant with 87 eggs Caught in Everglades

Today there are approximately 250 species of turtles and tortoises.

Andros Iguana Education Kit Checklist

Turtle Research, Education, and Conservation Program

An Ancient Reptile by Guy Belleranti

Darwin s Finches and Natural Selection

Activities are for use as intended at home, in the classroom, and story-times. Copyright 2007 by Sylvan Dell Publishing.

The Alligator Snapping Turtle (Macroclemys temmincki) in Southeast Oklahoma

Amphibians and Reptiles Division B

Dinosaurs and Dinosaur National Monument

A Survey of Aquatic Turtles at Kickapoo State Park and Middle Fork State Fish and Wildlife Area (MFSFWA)

Recognizing that the government of Mexico lists the loggerhead as in danger of extinction ; and

18 August Puerto Rican Crested Toad Dustin Smith, North Carolina Zoological Park

VANCOUVER ISLAND MARMOT

Cam in the Classroom: Misty the Barred Owl

People around the world should be striving to preserve a healthy environment for both humans and

Aquarium Department Celebrate, Connect, Care

About Reptiles A Guide for Children. Cathryn Sill Illustrated by John Sill

Snapping Turtle Monitoring Program Guide

Breeding Icelandic Sheepdog article for ISIC 2012 Wilma Roem

Conserving Birds in North America

Table of Contents. About Finish Line New York ELLs Unit 1 Speaking 5. Unit 2 Listening/Reading/Writing 32. Unit 3 Transition to ELA 139

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS June - August 2018

DIBELS Next Student Materials

HARI SREENIVASAN: Now to a remarkable story of transformation and the unlikely allies of an endangered butterfly.

PORTRAIT OF THE AMERICAN BALD EAGLE

Sent via and U.S. Mail. Please Stop Using Wild-Caught Turtles at the Bel Air Turtle Race

Dinosaurs. Lesson 1 Amazing dinosaurs. 1 Talk about it What do you know about dinosaurs?

Steps Towards a Blanding s Turtle Recovery Plan in Illinois: status assessment and management

Mexican Gray Wolf Reintroduction

Desert Tortoise By Guy Belleranti

SEALANT, WATERPROOFING & RESTORATION INSTITUTE SPRING PEREGRINE FALCONS: DIS RAPTORS OF WORK AT HEIGHT

Mexican Gray Wolf Endangered Population Modeling in the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area

Amphibians&Reptiles. MISSION READINESS While Protecting NAVY EARTH DAY POSTER. DoD PARC Program Sustains

Sanderson, Glen C. 1986

A Slithering Success Story

Missouri s. Turtles. By Jeffrey T. Briggler and Tom R. Johnson, Herpetologists. 1 Missouri s Turtles

Illustrated by Linda Howard Bittner

Tour de Turtles: It s a Race for Survival! Developed by Gayle N Evans, Science Master Teacher, UFTeach, University of Florida

Post-Release Success of Captive Bred Louisiana Pine Snakes

Trapped in a Sea Turtle Nest

How does the rescue and rehabilitation of stranded and injured sea turtles impact species survival? Vocabulary:

Biodiversity and Extinction. Lecture 9

SEA TURTLE CHARACTERISTICS

Lewis and Clark Explore The West: What Did They See?

Reptiles. Ectothermic vertebrates Very successful Have scales and toenails Amniotes (lay eggs with yolk on land) Made up of 4 orders:

Steve Russell. George Balazs. Scott Bloom Norie Murasaki

REPORT OF ACTIVITIES 2009 TURTLE ECOLOGY RESEARCH REPORT Crescent Lake National Wildlife Refuge 3 to 26 June 2009

Third Annual Conference on Animals and the Law

Giant Galapagos tortoise, Lonesome George, looking his most majestic By Scientific American, adapted by Newsela staff Nov.

AMERICAN ALLIGATOR. Alligator mississippiensis. Map. Picture Picture Picture

Trunk Contents. Crane Flight Feathers (3)

Reptiles Notes. Compiled by the Davidson College Herpetology Laboratory

SLOW DOWN, LOVE WIZARD. HERE S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE HORNED LIZARD.

Table of Contents. Appendix 167. About Finish Line New York ELLs Unit 1 Speaking 5. Unit 2 Listening/Reading/Writing 32

Amazing oceans. Age 3-5 years. Contents

A Reading A Z Level R Leveled Book Word Count: 1,564. Sea Turtles

Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge s Ocelots

Legal Supplement Part B Vol. 53, No th March, NOTICE THE ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE SPECIES (GREEN TURTLE) NOTICE, 2014

To Persons Wishing to Apply for a Commercial Aquatic Turtle Harvester License

Lynx Update May 25, 2009 INTRODUCTION

Title of Project: Distribution of the Collared Lizard, Crotophytus collaris, in the Arkansas River Valley and Ouachita Mountains

Legal Supplement Part B Vol. 53, No th March, NOTICE THE ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE SPECIES (OLIVE RIDLEY TURTLE) NOTICE, 2014

A Conversation with Mike Phillips

Progress at a Turtle s Pace: the Lake Jackson Ecopassage Project. Matthew J. Aresco, Ph.D. Lake Jackson Ecopassage Alliance

In the zoo or in the wild, it's a tough life for the polar bear

HUMAN-COYOTE INCIDENT REPORT CHICAGO, IL. April 2014

Northeast Florida Threatened and Endangered Animals

TEXT STRUCTURE TEXT STRUCTURE

Why should we care about biodiversity? Why does it matter?

Amazed skiers and snowboarders run into rare lynx in Colorado

Endangered Species Origami

Who Really Owns the Beach? The Competition Between Sea Turtles and the Coast Renee C. Cohen

ASACA CRUELTY INVESTIGATION: 101# Law Enforcement Training Institute

Snapping Turtles (Reptiles) By Elizabeth Thomas

Texas Quail Index. Result Demonstration Report 2016

Writing: Lesson 31. Today the students will be learning how to write more advanced middle paragraphs using a variety of elaborative techniques.

Running between the cliffs and the swamp is Snake Road, also called LaRue Road. LaRue Road runs between two very different ecosystems.

Helping the Cause of Macaws

Amazing oceans. Age 3-5 years. Contents

Maya s Story. Beth McMillin. Dr. Karen Tobias and Maya

Aspects in the Biology of Sea Turtles

Transcription:

Environmental Almanac: Massive turtles introduced Sun, 11/02/2014-7:00am Rob Kanter (/author/rob-kanter) In the last week of October 1984, a man named Lance Cantrall captured an adult alligator snapping turtle on a bank of Clear Creek, a small tributary of the Mississippi River in far southwestern Illinois. Knowing alligator snappers were rare in the state, he conveyed it to personnel with the Illinois Department of Conservation (the predecessor of today's Department of Natural Resources). They measured it (top shell, front to back, 19.5 inches), estimated its weight (70 pounds) and collected some other data before releasing it back at the capture site, unchanged except for a message they painted on its back in white nail polish: "Contact IL. Conservation." As far as anyone knows, that turtle was never seen again. And nearly 30 years passed before the next time a native alligator snapper (definitely not the same one) was found in the state, which happened last month. That's when Chris Phillips, a herpetologist with the Illinois Natural History Survey, pulled one from the murky depths at the base of a logjam in a Union County creek. Ironically, Phillips found that native turtle as he was diving to recover an introduced alligator snapper, one that had been released in the creek this summer as part of broad effort to reestablish them in Illinois and Oklahoma and augment populations in Louisiana. That introduced turtle, which he afterward also found, had been fitted with a radio transmitter to make locating it easier. http://www.news-gazette.com/living/2014-11-02/environmental-almanac-massive-turtles-introduced.html 1/5

To clarify, alligator snapping turtles (Macrochelys temminckii) are a species distinct from common snapping turtles (Chelydra serpentine), despite some similarities in habits, habitat use and look. Alligator snappers can be identified by three ridges of prominent spines that run from front to back on the upper shell and by the size of their head, which looks huge in proportion to the size of their body, and also features a prominent hooked beak. Alligator snappers are also distinguished by numerous fleshy projections on the head, neck and front legs, as well as a muscular tail nearly as long as its shell. And size. Alligator snappers grow larger than any other turtle in North America, with top weights in the wild reaching 155 pounds, and top weights of captives reaching 220 or more. Unlike common snapping turtles, which can adjust to life in nearly any body of water and can be found throughout Illinois, alligator snappers strongly prefer large rivers or waters directly connected to them. They appear never to have been abundant in the state, which marks the northern limit of their range, and occurred here only in connection with the Illinois, Ohio, Wabash and Mississippi rivers. I spoke recently about the project to re-establish alligator snapping turtles in Illinois with two of the people at its forefront, Mike Dreslik, also a herpetologist with INHS, and Ethan Kessler, an INHS intern who is working toward a master's degree in the UI Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences with Dreslik as his adviser. Here's what I learned from them. http://www.news-gazette.com/living/2014-11-02/environmental-almanac-massive-turtles-introduced.html 2/5

During the 20th century, alligator snapping turtle populations declined in Illinois as a result of habitat loss from the alteration of rivers and overharvesting for food and other purposes. As a result, they were listed as endangered in the state. But favorable conditions now exist in enough places to make reintroduction feasible. The current reintroduction, which involves collaboration with multiple other state and federal agencies, as well as the St. Louis and Peoria zoos, involves a long-term effort because alligator snapping turtles are long-lived creatures, and they don't reach sexual maturity until they're 11 or more years old. "You want grandchildren out of this," Dreslik said. "We'll be looking at other benchmarks along the way, but ultimately we'll know we've succeeded when we see the offspring of the offspring of the turtles we're releasing." This summer, Dreslik, Kessler and others released a total of 97 alligator snapping turtles, dividing them among three sites on a creek with suitable habit, and spreading the work out over three days with time in between. To say those turtles were released, though, tells only a small piece of the story. On the day they were let go in the water, every one got a health checkup, which included a visual exam and blood work. They were also fitted with ibuttons, tiny data loggers that record the water temperature every hour for a year. In addition, 62 of the turtles had radio transmitters attached to their shells so researchers could re-find them. And by "researchers," I mean Kessler, a field technician and whoever else they could get to help. Before the end of the field season in mid-october, Kessler said, they located each turtle three times a week, and he ended up with data from more than 1,300 successful turtle finds. http://www.news-gazette.com/living/2014-11-02/environmental-almanac-massive-turtles-introduced.html 3/5

Partly this was to keep tabs on the health of the turtles and to see whether they were competent at life in the wild, since nearly all of them were reared in aquariums at hatcheries or zoos. Happily, they really were. Only one of the turtles with radio transmitters died this year, a small one that was hanging out in shallow water. (Evidence at the scene suggests a raccoon killed it.) Additionally, the information gathered in relocating them will help scientists answer important questions about habitat preferences and movements. The surprise on this front came from the biggest of the released turtles, a 16-pounder. Upon release, he immediately moved nearly a mile upstream to a big logjam, where he then stayed put for the rest of the season. The answers to questions about movements and habitat preference will, in turn, help to answer the broader one that interests INHS researchers, and which has implications for the prospects of other endangered turtle species as well. As Dreslik summed it up, "How do we reintroduce turtles to the wild with the greatest chance of success?" Of course, the happiest surprise of all in this story was that the reintroduction effort led to the discovery of the wild alligator snapping turtle described above. As to what exactly that means, the jury is still out. But given the amount of time and effort that has gone into looking for alligator snapping turtles, no one I spoke with was inclined to take it as evidence of some hidden, viable population. A pressing concern is how well the turtles introduced this year cope with winter. We'll check back in the spring. Rob Kanter is a lecturer with the UI School of Earth, Society and Environment. Environmental Almanac is supported in part by the UI Institute for Sustainability, Energy and http://www.news-gazette.com/living/2014-11-02/environmental-almanac-massive-turtles-introduced.html 4/5

Environment and can be heard on WILL-AM 580 at 4:45 and 6:45 p.m. on Thursdays. Login (/user/login?destination=comment/reply/1310441#comment-form) or register (/user/register?destination=comment/reply/1310441#commentform) to post comments http://www.news-gazette.com/living/2014-11-02/environmental-almanac-massive-turtles-introduced.html 5/5