Reptile & Amphibian Forums

Welcome to kingsnake.com's message board system. Here you may share and discuss information with others about your favorite reptile and amphibian related topics such as care and feeding, caging requirements, permits and licenses, and more. Launched in 1997, the kingsnake.com message board system is one of the oldest and largest systems on the internet.

Click here to visit Classifieds
https://www.crepnw.com/
Click here for Dragon Serpents

ON Press: Sad week for turtles

Jun 11, 2007 08:47 PM

PACKET & TIMES (Orillia, Ontario) 09 June 07 Sad week for turtles; Many travelling to sunny slopes to lay eggs killed on road (Bob Bowles)
It has been a busy but sad week for us here at Kids For turtles Environmental Education. We mentioned last week to expect female Midland painted, Blanding's and snapping turtles to be out of their wetlands and crossing roads looking for nest-laying location this week.
We know that hundreds of both male and female turtles are killed every year on highways - the males in mid-May as they come out to move to another wetland to mate, and the females in late May and early June as they come on land to look for well-drained, sunny, sandy slopes to lay their eggs. We did not expect to find as many female Blanding's turtles, a threatened species at risk in Ontario, killed on the highways this year.
We found several dead female Blanding's full of eggs and crushed on the highways. It is sad when you consider that a female Blanding's has to wait until it is 12 to 14 years old before they are developed enough to mate and lay eggs. They then come out of the water and have to move farther than in the past to find nesting locations due to shoreline development.
We now have more people, more cars, and more highways which bring the female turtles to play the deadly game of trying to cross the road to find suitable nesting sites. Many females - full of eggs for a future generation - never make it to their nesting sites and back to the wetland. This week we found several of them crushed on highways. We rescued any eggs still intact and buried these in a suitable well-drained site near wetlands, but we have no idea if these will be successful and hatch into baby Blanding's in the fall. This is the highest turtle traffic time of the year and the number of turtles on roads will drop once egg-laying time passes. There will be another high-turtle-traffic time in late September when the eggs hatch and baby turtles try to make their way back to wetlands. The public has been a great help reporting turtle observation on roads and helping turtles escape from the danger of passing vehicles. Kids For turtles would like to thank you and ask you to join us in learning more about and protecting the world around us.
You can contact us at info@kidsforturtles.com or call 325-3149.

http://www.wellandtribune.ca/webapp/sitepages/search/results.asp?contentid=564582&catname=Local News&type=search&search1=turtle

Replies (1)

Jun 25, 2007 06:06 PM

THE EXAMINER (Peterborough, Ontario) 20 June 07 Editorial: Fate of dead mother turtle shows importance of signs
"I can't imagine how the driver could not have seen her."
"She was definitely dead and her eggs were scattered everywhere."
"She was well off the road, it had to have been deliberate."
These are some of the comments I heard from angry, upset neighbours when a snapping turtle who was nesting on the shoulder of a neighbourhood road was hit by a vehicle.
She lived here long before there were roads, let alone a paved busy road with blind corners and bridges with cement walls which ban her from the natural incline to Baxter Creek and the vegetation to hide in.
She lived here before any of the two legged creatures and laid her eggs each year in a nest of well drained gravel in an area that she had hatched from. She lived here at a time when nature was in balance and there wasn't an overpopulation of raccoons and skunks who feast annually on her eggs and all the other turtle eggs.
She slept in the mud of the creek all winter and in the spring, summer and fall foraged on the dead fish, beaver and muskrat and any other aquatic carcasses she could find, helping to keep the water clean. Then for one day each year she was compelled to come up out of the safety of her watery home and walk to where she was born 20 years ago, dig a hole, lay her 20 to 50 eggs, cover it and retreat back into the water. By her size she must have repeated this routine for 30 to 40 years and could have continued for another 40 to 50 years, thereby ensuring time for any of her female hatchings, who had escaped being road kill or food for land or water predators, to reach their 20 years of age and start to nest.
The loss of a turtle before it reaches its ripe old age has a major impact on the survival of the species. There are eight species of turtle in Ontario and six of them are listed as "species at risk"; the painted turtle and snapping turtle may follow.
The KIDS 4 TURTLES organization is teaching us the invaluable lesson of respect for this creature who has been with us since the time of the dinosaurs. Turtle Crossing signs promote awareness and I commend these children whole heartedly for all their hard work and perseverance. The KIDS 4 TURTLES organization deserves our full support. A humongous thank you goes out to each of them. They do our community proud.
http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/webapp/sitepages/content.asp?contentid=579072&catname=Editorial&classif=

THE EXAMINER (Peterborough, Ontario) 20 June 07 Kids rally to try to save turtle cross signs (Brendan Wedley)
Turtle crossing signs can help save the reptiles from becoming road kill, a group of children who want the county to continue its use of the signs told The Examiner.
Kids for Turtles has a tough fight ahead. County council decided two weeks ago to stop installing warning signs other than standardized signs in the Manual for Uniform Traffic Control Devices, which does not include turtle crossing signs.
At least a dozen children wearing bright yellow T-shirts went to the council meeting Wednesday to silently protest the decision.
Turtles need to be protected, said 13-year-old Cameron McNab, a Westmount Public School student.
"They're a really important part of our eco-system," he said.
Council invited the group to speak at its next meeting July 4.
County staff cited ongoing maintenance costs and the need to limit the number and type of signs installed in the municipal right of way next to roads as the reason to restrict the use of signs to the ones in the manual.
"We do get requests all the time for signs that do not meet the guidelines in the Manual for Uniform Traffic Control Devices," public works director Chris Bradley said.
Turtle-crossing signs were put up along county roads in 2001 thanks to the efforts of a group of children. Kids for Turtles raised $4,000 for the signs and the county paid for the staff time and equipment to install them at certain locations.
Many of the signs have since been knocked down or stolen.
The county has received several letters from residents urging it to reverse its decision to stop using the turtle crossing signs.
Turtles in Ontario are in decline, with six of eight designated species at risk, and road mortality is the leading cause of mortality in turtles, McNab states.
"Five years ago we approached the council asking for support in our campaign to rescue such a vulnerable species. The council support us and even gave us an award for our efforts," he states.
"Now the council has reversed its position. We are betrayed, and hurt, by the shocking actions of the council that we are expected to vote for in future years."
McNab told The Examiner Kids for Turtles has a solution for every one of the problems the county cited when it decided to stop using the signs.
In Algonquin Provincial Park, for instance, the back of signs are greased to decrease theft, McNab said.
"At least if they're getting stolen by college students someone's looking at them on a wall and they're raising awareness that way," he said.
A biologist sent a letter to council to inform it about the issues that threaten turtle populations.
"Road mortality may end up being the most dominant factor in the decimation of turtle populations," said Scott Gillingwater, species at risk biologist for the Upper Thames River Conservation Authority.
"The point is, turtle road crossing signs raise awareness, and in turn lessen the effects of road mortality. The work that children have done to maintain turtle populations in the Peterborough area should be fostered, publicized and awarded, not halted or ignored."
Bradley explained to council why moose and deer crossing signs are in the manual but not turtle crossing signs.
"They're installed because there is a danger for the motorist, there is a potential of the motorist being killed," he said.
Several council members said they support their original decision but would like to give Kids for Turtles a chance to make a presentation at the next council meeting.
"Obviously, we have members of Peterborough county who are very passionate about this issue," Douro-Dummer Reeve J. Murray Jones said.
"This in no way means the decision will or will not change," Smith-Ennismore-Lakefield Reeve Ron Millen said.
http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/webapp/sitepages/content.asp?contentid=579495&catname=Local News&classif=News Live

Site Tools